Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The determination of probabilities
- 3 Subjective risk determination
- 4 Calibration and training
- 5 The concept of utility
- 6 Project investment risks
- 7 Risk and financial institutions
- 8 Risk and portfolio investment
- 9 Gambling and speculation
- 10 Physical risk and its perception
- 11 Morbidity and medicine
- 12 Risk in public policy
- Appendix A Handling probabilities
- Appendix B Decision-making procedures
- Appendix C Reduction of risks
- Exercises
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Subjective risk determination
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The determination of probabilities
- 3 Subjective risk determination
- 4 Calibration and training
- 5 The concept of utility
- 6 Project investment risks
- 7 Risk and financial institutions
- 8 Risk and portfolio investment
- 9 Gambling and speculation
- 10 Physical risk and its perception
- 11 Morbidity and medicine
- 12 Risk in public policy
- Appendix A Handling probabilities
- Appendix B Decision-making procedures
- Appendix C Reduction of risks
- Exercises
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Risk and uncertainty
The collective principle for risks outlined in Chapter 2 can be applied to many situations inside and outside commerce. But in some circumstances no immediate relevant collective springs to mind. This chapter looks at such situations where probability estimates cannot be made by the collective approach on a basis that would necessarily command overall agreement. Such situations are sometimes labelled ‘uncertainty’ and differentiated from ‘risk’ situations.
The separation of uncertainty from risk is a frequent practice in industrial circles. Examples cited in this context are political uncertainties such as nationalization, economic uncertainties such as forthcoming rates of inflation, or changes in the rates of interest. Many statisticians argue cogently that there is no real distinction between risk and uncertainty as defined in this way. The distinction really being made, it is argued, is between repeatable and non-repeatable events. Thus games of chance such as roulette are repeatable, just as the actuary of an assurance company regards death as a repeatable event, in the sense that a large population is at risk and alternative events ‘death’ or ‘no death’ are repeated for each person in the population each year. Although one cannot be dogmatic about a single person dying, one can be reasonably specific about the number of persons dying from among a large group in a specified period. But the outcome, ‘the next President of the United States will be a woman’ is not of the same category. To count up the number of eligible voters who are women (W) and men (M) respectively and express the chance as the proportion W/(M+W)
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- The Business of Risk , pp. 33 - 48Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1983
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