Moral Hazard, Agency Costs, and Asset Prices in a Competitive Equilibrium

  • 1 January 2004
    • preprint
    • Published in RePEc
Abstract
The behavior of economic agents in the presence of uncertainty about exogenous events and imperfect information about the endogenously influenced actions of other agents with whom they contract has been receiving growing attention. In particular, the economic theory of agency explicitly recognizes that when agents enter into synergistic relationships, each agent will act in a manner consistent with the maximization of its personal welfare, thus giving rise to a phenomenon called moral hazard.
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