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An individual health insurance market has no enrollment mandate. People who know they have chronic conditions, plan surgery, or are in poor health are eager to buy comprehensive coverage. Healthy people, calculating that their expected medical costs are low, often skip coverage or buy minimal plans. The insurer, unable to perfectly distinguish health status before enrollment, prices premiums based on the expected cost of the insured pool. But the pool is skewed toward the sick — "adversely selected" — so claims exceed projections, premiums rise, more healthy people drop out, the pool gets sicker, premiums rise further. Without a mechanism to bring healthy people in, the market spirals toward collapse. This is the adverse selection death spiral — and it is exactly what happened in pre-ACA individual insurance markets in many U.S. states.
The setup
Adverse selection is the tendency for individuals who expect to be high-cost, high-risk, or low-quality participants to disproportionately enter markets that cannot screen for their characteristics. The problem arises before the transaction, from the less-informed party's inability to distinguish who they're dealing with.
Three conditions create adverse selection:
- Information asymmetry: one party (the participant) knows more about their own characteristics than the other (the insurer, employer, lender).
- Average pricing: the less-informed party must set terms (premiums, wages, interest rates) based on the average characteristics of the pool.
- Self-selection: participants with above-average costs or below-average quality benefit from average pricing; participants with below-average costs or above-average quality are overcharged and opt out.
The resulting pool is worse-than-average — an "adverse" selection of the population.
What happens — and why
In credit markets: borrowers who know they are poor credit risks are willing to pay higher interest rates (they know they may default); borrowers who know they are excellent risks will shop for lower rates. At any given rate, the lender attracts a disproportionate share of high-risk borrowers. The Federal Reserve's consumer credit research documents how lenders respond to adverse selection through credit scoring — screening mechanisms designed to categorize borrowers by observable characteristics that correlate with creditworthiness, reducing the information asymmetry.
In the ACA-structured health insurance markets, the individual mandate (and its later replacement with enrollment outreach) was designed explicitly to counter adverse selection: requiring healthy people to enroll prevents the risk pool from skewing sick. Community rating requirements (no discrimination by health status) combined with risk corridors and reinsurance were further adverse-selection countermeasures.
Where you see it in the wild
Employment markets exhibit adverse selection in the other direction: workers know their own productivity and motivation better than employers do. At any given wage, workers who know their productivity is below the offered wage are eager to accept; workers who know they are unusually productive may receive competing offers elsewhere. The result: job applicants are adversely selected toward lower productivity at any given advertised wage — which is why firms invest heavily in screening (interviews, tests, trial periods, credential requirements) to break the adverse selection.
The fix (or why it's hard to fix)
The fundamental fix is closing the information gap:
- Screening: the less-informed party collects information (medical exams, credit checks, interviews, background checks)
- Signaling: the informed party credibly communicates their type (degrees, warranties, money-back guarantees, track records)
- Mandates: compulsory participation prevents self-selection (required health insurance, required motor vehicle insurance)
- Risk pooling regulation: prohibiting exclusion of high-risk participants (guaranteed issue) combined with subsidizing participation by low-cost members





