Collaborative Housing and the Intermediation of Moral Hazard
This paper considers intermediation in a differentiated short-term housing market where heterogeneous agents may stay at a hotel or at one of several private hosts' properties, below or above hotel quality. The collaborative-housing market fails when agents' hidden actions are noncontractable. If expected liability is not excessive, a trusted intermediary can induce agents to exert first-best effort and fully insure the hosts' risks, without subsidizing the transactions. The intermediary can also extract the hosts' surplus if their outside option is zero; somewhat counterintuitively, the commission on either side of the transactions does not affect agents' equilibrium payoffs. The optimal commission structure makes direct transactions between hosts and renters unattractive.
2014
978-1-4799-2504-9
New York
9
Proceedings of the Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
4133
4141
REVIEWED
Event name | Event place | Event date |
Waikoloa, HI | JAN 06-09, 2014 | |