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Risk management, optimal

Version 2 2024-06-13, 09:06
Version 1 2015-02-06, 14:43
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posted on 2024-06-13, 09:06 authored by A Torre
Individuals continually confront a discrepancy between ever expanding and changing wants and the means that they have at their disposal, time, and income, to satisfy them. One of the consequences is the need to make constrained choices between alternatives that have uncertain outcomes. Risk is a different concept from uncertainty. Individual optimal risk management means reducing, eliminating, or fully bearing risk, after conducting a “cost-benefit” analysis. In practice, however, cognitive biases mean that many decisions are not economically rational, necessitating paternalistic government and judicial interventions. Systemic, or whole financial system collapse risk is, optimally managed using well-designed macroprudential regulatory tools. The source of this type of risk is the inherent dynamics of the financial system over the course of the business cycle, interacting with credit market negative externalities, often as in the case of the GFC, spawned by government regulatory failure.

History

Chapter number

99

Pagination

1-10

ISBN-13

9781461477525

ISBN-10

1461477522

Publication classification

BN Other book chapter, or book chapter not attributed to Deakin

Copyright notice

2014, Springer

Extent

117

Editor/Contributor(s)

Marciano A, Ramello GB

Publisher

Springer

Place of publication

New York, N.Y.

Title of book

Encyclopedia of law and economics

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