Master Moral Hazard Dilemma - Beginner Level Problems Moral Hazard Dilemma BEGINNER

Excel in competitive exams with this skill builder ⚡ worksheet on Moral Hazard Dilemma. Worksheet 3 of 10 contains 20 beginner-level problems. Target your step-by-step problem solving skills while practicing moral hazard dilemma practice, moral hazard dilemma for competitive exams, and how to solve moral hazard dilemma.

📝 Worksheet 3 of 10 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Beginner level

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Worksheet 3 of 10 (22% complete)

Question 1

Statement: An insurance company has been denying legitimate claims to boost profits. Whistleblowers have exposed this practice. The company argues that paying all claims would make their products unaffordable for everyone. Course of Action: I. I. The insurance regulator should impose heavy fines and mandate compensation to affected policyholders. II. II. Senior executives responsible for the policy should be prosecuted for fraud. III. III. The company should be allowed to continue its practices as market forces will punish them eventually. IV. IV. Independent audit of all denied claims should be conducted to identify all affected customers. V. V. New regulations should be introduced requiring transparent claims processing and third-party oversight.
Justice Framework: Punishment (I) + Accountability (II) + Remediation (IV) + Prevention (V). This ensures victims are compensated, wrongdoers punished, and recurrence prevented.

Question 2

Statement: A systemically important private retirement fund has made excessively risky investments and is now facing imminent collapse. While the failure would cause immediate financial ruin for millions of retirees, a government bailout would incentivize other funds to take similar reckless risks in the future (Moral Hazard). Course of Action: I. I. Government should provide a time-bound, conditional, liquidity injection to stabilize the fund and prevent a systemic panic. II. II. The current executive and investment teams responsible for the risky decisions should be immediately dismissed and face a full regulatory investigation. III. III. The fund should be allowed to fail completely, forcing the market to bear the cost and reinforcing the principle of risk-taking accountability. IV. IV. Regulatory oversight laws governing retirement fund investment limits should be immediately reviewed and significantly tightened. V. V. Affected retirees should be fully compensated using taxpayer money without any requirement for management change or reform.
Balanced Approach: Systemic Stability (I) + Accountability (II) + Regulatory Reform (IV). This prevents collapse while addressing moral hazard through consequences and prevention.

Question 3

Statement: A pharmaceutical company has been selling a life-saving drug at exorbitant prices, making it unaffordable for most patients. The company claims high prices are necessary to recover R&D costs. Course of Action: I. I. The government should invoke compulsory licensing to allow generic production. II. II. The company should be allowed to continue as price controls would discourage future innovation. III. III. Price negotiations should be conducted with the company to find a sustainable pricing model. IV. IV. Government subsidies should be provided to make the drug affordable for low-income patients. V. V. International pressure should be applied to force the company to lower prices globally.
Access vs. Innovation Balance: Compulsory licensing (I) + Negotiation (III) + Subsidies (IV) + International pressure (V) create multi-pronged approach without completely destroying innovation incentives.

Question 4

Statement: A pharmaceutical company has been selling a life-saving drug at exorbitant prices, making it unaffordable for most patients. The company claims high prices are necessary to recover R&D costs. Course of Action: I. I. The government should invoke compulsory licensing to allow generic production. II. II. The company should be allowed to continue as price controls would discourage future innovation. III. III. Price negotiations should be conducted with the company to find a sustainable pricing model. IV. IV. Government subsidies should be provided to make the drug affordable for low-income patients. V. V. International pressure should be applied to force the company to lower prices globally.
Access vs. Innovation Balance: Compulsory licensing (I) + Negotiation (III) + Subsidies (IV) + International pressure (V) create multi-pronged approach without completely destroying innovation incentives.

Question 5

Statement: An insurance company has been denying legitimate claims to boost profits. Whistleblowers have exposed this practice. The company argues that paying all claims would make their products unaffordable for everyone. Course of Action: I. I. The insurance regulator should impose heavy fines and mandate compensation to affected policyholders. II. II. Senior executives responsible for the policy should be prosecuted for fraud. III. III. The company should be allowed to continue its practices as market forces will punish them eventually. IV. IV. Independent audit of all denied claims should be conducted to identify all affected customers. V. V. New regulations should be introduced requiring transparent claims processing and third-party oversight.
Justice Framework: Punishment (I) + Accountability (II) + Remediation (IV) + Prevention (V). This ensures victims are compensated, wrongdoers punished, and recurrence prevented.

Question 6

Statement: An insurance company has been denying legitimate claims to boost profits. Whistleblowers have exposed this practice. The company argues that paying all claims would make their products unaffordable for everyone. Course of Action: I. I. The insurance regulator should impose heavy fines and mandate compensation to affected policyholders. II. II. Senior executives responsible for the policy should be prosecuted for fraud. III. III. The company should be allowed to continue its practices as market forces will punish them eventually. IV. IV. Independent audit of all denied claims should be conducted to identify all affected customers. V. V. New regulations should be introduced requiring transparent claims processing and third-party oversight.
Justice Framework: Punishment (I) + Accountability (II) + Remediation (IV) + Prevention (V). This ensures victims are compensated, wrongdoers punished, and recurrence prevented.

Question 7

Statement: A pharmaceutical company has been selling a life-saving drug at exorbitant prices, making it unaffordable for most patients. The company claims high prices are necessary to recover R&D costs. Course of Action: I. I. The government should invoke compulsory licensing to allow generic production. II. II. The company should be allowed to continue as price controls would discourage future innovation. III. III. Price negotiations should be conducted with the company to find a sustainable pricing model. IV. IV. Government subsidies should be provided to make the drug affordable for low-income patients. V. V. International pressure should be applied to force the company to lower prices globally.
Access vs. Innovation Balance: Compulsory licensing (I) + Negotiation (III) + Subsidies (IV) + International pressure (V) create multi-pronged approach without completely destroying innovation incentives.

Question 8

Statement: A systemically important private retirement fund has made excessively risky investments and is now facing imminent collapse. While the failure would cause immediate financial ruin for millions of retirees, a government bailout would incentivize other funds to take similar reckless risks in the future (Moral Hazard). Course of Action: I. I. Government should provide a time-bound, conditional, liquidity injection to stabilize the fund and prevent a systemic panic. II. II. The current executive and investment teams responsible for the risky decisions should be immediately dismissed and face a full regulatory investigation. III. III. The fund should be allowed to fail completely, forcing the market to bear the cost and reinforcing the principle of risk-taking accountability. IV. IV. Regulatory oversight laws governing retirement fund investment limits should be immediately reviewed and significantly tightened. V. V. Affected retirees should be fully compensated using taxpayer money without any requirement for management change or reform.
Balanced Approach: Systemic Stability (I) + Accountability (II) + Regulatory Reform (IV). This prevents collapse while addressing moral hazard through consequences and prevention.

Question 9

Statement: A systemically important private retirement fund has made excessively risky investments and is now facing imminent collapse. While the failure would cause immediate financial ruin for millions of retirees, a government bailout would incentivize other funds to take similar reckless risks in the future (Moral Hazard). Course of Action: I. I. Government should provide a time-bound, conditional, liquidity injection to stabilize the fund and prevent a systemic panic. II. II. The current executive and investment teams responsible for the risky decisions should be immediately dismissed and face a full regulatory investigation. III. III. The fund should be allowed to fail completely, forcing the market to bear the cost and reinforcing the principle of risk-taking accountability. IV. IV. Regulatory oversight laws governing retirement fund investment limits should be immediately reviewed and significantly tightened. V. V. Affected retirees should be fully compensated using taxpayer money without any requirement for management change or reform.
Balanced Approach: Systemic Stability (I) + Accountability (II) + Regulatory Reform (IV). This prevents collapse while addressing moral hazard through consequences and prevention.

Question 10

Statement: A pharmaceutical company has been selling a life-saving drug at exorbitant prices, making it unaffordable for most patients. The company claims high prices are necessary to recover R&D costs. Course of Action: I. I. The government should invoke compulsory licensing to allow generic production. II. II. The company should be allowed to continue as price controls would discourage future innovation. III. III. Price negotiations should be conducted with the company to find a sustainable pricing model. IV. IV. Government subsidies should be provided to make the drug affordable for low-income patients. V. V. International pressure should be applied to force the company to lower prices globally.
Access vs. Innovation Balance: Compulsory licensing (I) + Negotiation (III) + Subsidies (IV) + International pressure (V) create multi-pronged approach without completely destroying innovation incentives.

Question 11

Statement: An insurance company has been denying legitimate claims to boost profits. Whistleblowers have exposed this practice. The company argues that paying all claims would make their products unaffordable for everyone. Course of Action: I. I. The insurance regulator should impose heavy fines and mandate compensation to affected policyholders. II. II. Senior executives responsible for the policy should be prosecuted for fraud. III. III. The company should be allowed to continue its practices as market forces will punish them eventually. IV. IV. Independent audit of all denied claims should be conducted to identify all affected customers. V. V. New regulations should be introduced requiring transparent claims processing and third-party oversight.
Justice Framework: Punishment (I) + Accountability (II) + Remediation (IV) + Prevention (V). This ensures victims are compensated, wrongdoers punished, and recurrence prevented.

Question 12

Statement: An insurance company has been denying legitimate claims to boost profits. Whistleblowers have exposed this practice. The company argues that paying all claims would make their products unaffordable for everyone. Course of Action: I. I. The insurance regulator should impose heavy fines and mandate compensation to affected policyholders. II. II. Senior executives responsible for the policy should be prosecuted for fraud. III. III. The company should be allowed to continue its practices as market forces will punish them eventually. IV. IV. Independent audit of all denied claims should be conducted to identify all affected customers. V. V. New regulations should be introduced requiring transparent claims processing and third-party oversight.
Justice Framework: Punishment (I) + Accountability (II) + Remediation (IV) + Prevention (V). This ensures victims are compensated, wrongdoers punished, and recurrence prevented.

Question 13

Statement: A pharmaceutical company has been selling a life-saving drug at exorbitant prices, making it unaffordable for most patients. The company claims high prices are necessary to recover R&D costs. Course of Action: I. I. The government should invoke compulsory licensing to allow generic production. II. II. The company should be allowed to continue as price controls would discourage future innovation. III. III. Price negotiations should be conducted with the company to find a sustainable pricing model. IV. IV. Government subsidies should be provided to make the drug affordable for low-income patients. V. V. International pressure should be applied to force the company to lower prices globally.
Access vs. Innovation Balance: Compulsory licensing (I) + Negotiation (III) + Subsidies (IV) + International pressure (V) create multi-pronged approach without completely destroying innovation incentives.

Question 14

Statement: An insurance company has been denying legitimate claims to boost profits. Whistleblowers have exposed this practice. The company argues that paying all claims would make their products unaffordable for everyone. Course of Action: I. I. The insurance regulator should impose heavy fines and mandate compensation to affected policyholders. II. II. Senior executives responsible for the policy should be prosecuted for fraud. III. III. The company should be allowed to continue its practices as market forces will punish them eventually. IV. IV. Independent audit of all denied claims should be conducted to identify all affected customers. V. V. New regulations should be introduced requiring transparent claims processing and third-party oversight.
Justice Framework: Punishment (I) + Accountability (II) + Remediation (IV) + Prevention (V). This ensures victims are compensated, wrongdoers punished, and recurrence prevented.

Question 15

Statement: An insurance company has been denying legitimate claims to boost profits. Whistleblowers have exposed this practice. The company argues that paying all claims would make their products unaffordable for everyone. Course of Action: I. I. The insurance regulator should impose heavy fines and mandate compensation to affected policyholders. II. II. Senior executives responsible for the policy should be prosecuted for fraud. III. III. The company should be allowed to continue its practices as market forces will punish them eventually. IV. IV. Independent audit of all denied claims should be conducted to identify all affected customers. V. V. New regulations should be introduced requiring transparent claims processing and third-party oversight.
Justice Framework: Punishment (I) + Accountability (II) + Remediation (IV) + Prevention (V). This ensures victims are compensated, wrongdoers punished, and recurrence prevented.

Question 16

Statement: A systemically important private retirement fund has made excessively risky investments and is now facing imminent collapse. While the failure would cause immediate financial ruin for millions of retirees, a government bailout would incentivize other funds to take similar reckless risks in the future (Moral Hazard). Course of Action: I. I. Government should provide a time-bound, conditional, liquidity injection to stabilize the fund and prevent a systemic panic. II. II. The current executive and investment teams responsible for the risky decisions should be immediately dismissed and face a full regulatory investigation. III. III. The fund should be allowed to fail completely, forcing the market to bear the cost and reinforcing the principle of risk-taking accountability. IV. IV. Regulatory oversight laws governing retirement fund investment limits should be immediately reviewed and significantly tightened. V. V. Affected retirees should be fully compensated using taxpayer money without any requirement for management change or reform.
Balanced Approach: Systemic Stability (I) + Accountability (II) + Regulatory Reform (IV). This prevents collapse while addressing moral hazard through consequences and prevention.

Question 17

Statement: A systemically important private retirement fund has made excessively risky investments and is now facing imminent collapse. While the failure would cause immediate financial ruin for millions of retirees, a government bailout would incentivize other funds to take similar reckless risks in the future (Moral Hazard). Course of Action: I. I. Government should provide a time-bound, conditional, liquidity injection to stabilize the fund and prevent a systemic panic. II. II. The current executive and investment teams responsible for the risky decisions should be immediately dismissed and face a full regulatory investigation. III. III. The fund should be allowed to fail completely, forcing the market to bear the cost and reinforcing the principle of risk-taking accountability. IV. IV. Regulatory oversight laws governing retirement fund investment limits should be immediately reviewed and significantly tightened. V. V. Affected retirees should be fully compensated using taxpayer money without any requirement for management change or reform.
Balanced Approach: Systemic Stability (I) + Accountability (II) + Regulatory Reform (IV). This prevents collapse while addressing moral hazard through consequences and prevention.

Question 18

Statement: An insurance company has been denying legitimate claims to boost profits. Whistleblowers have exposed this practice. The company argues that paying all claims would make their products unaffordable for everyone. Course of Action: I. I. The insurance regulator should impose heavy fines and mandate compensation to affected policyholders. II. II. Senior executives responsible for the policy should be prosecuted for fraud. III. III. The company should be allowed to continue its practices as market forces will punish them eventually. IV. IV. Independent audit of all denied claims should be conducted to identify all affected customers. V. V. New regulations should be introduced requiring transparent claims processing and third-party oversight.
Justice Framework: Punishment (I) + Accountability (II) + Remediation (IV) + Prevention (V). This ensures victims are compensated, wrongdoers punished, and recurrence prevented.

Question 19

Statement: An insurance company has been denying legitimate claims to boost profits. Whistleblowers have exposed this practice. The company argues that paying all claims would make their products unaffordable for everyone. Course of Action: I. I. The insurance regulator should impose heavy fines and mandate compensation to affected policyholders. II. II. Senior executives responsible for the policy should be prosecuted for fraud. III. III. The company should be allowed to continue its practices as market forces will punish them eventually. IV. IV. Independent audit of all denied claims should be conducted to identify all affected customers. V. V. New regulations should be introduced requiring transparent claims processing and third-party oversight.
Justice Framework: Punishment (I) + Accountability (II) + Remediation (IV) + Prevention (V). This ensures victims are compensated, wrongdoers punished, and recurrence prevented.

Question 20

Statement: A pharmaceutical company has been selling a life-saving drug at exorbitant prices, making it unaffordable for most patients. The company claims high prices are necessary to recover R&D costs. Course of Action: I. I. The government should invoke compulsory licensing to allow generic production. II. II. The company should be allowed to continue as price controls would discourage future innovation. III. III. Price negotiations should be conducted with the company to find a sustainable pricing model. IV. IV. Government subsidies should be provided to make the drug affordable for low-income patients. V. V. International pressure should be applied to force the company to lower prices globally.
Access vs. Innovation Balance: Compulsory licensing (I) + Negotiation (III) + Subsidies (IV) + International pressure (V) create multi-pronged approach without completely destroying innovation incentives.
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