Risk Intelligence II
Somehow it worked.
Several psychologists stated that economists were rational and those who didn’t know what economists knew were irrational.
They collected data on how irrational folks are and analyzed that data and grouped it and gave cute names to various groups.
But I think that you could do the same thing with long division. Certainly with calculus. Compare answers of rubes on the sidewalk to math PhD s on a bunch of math questions and how well do you think the rubes would do?
Some of the questions that the psychologists asked were about risk. They proved that folks who rely solely on their gut to make decisions about risk were not very good at it.
I am sure that no-one with any Risk Intelligence would have bet against that finding.
Because Risk Intelligence consists of more than just trusting your gut. It also requires education regarding the best practices for risk management and risk assessment along with stories of how well (and sometimes ill) intentioned business managers went wrong with risk. It also requires careful analysis. Often statistical analysis. Analysis that is usually not particularly intuitive even with experience.
But Risk Intelligence still needs a well developed gut. Because history doesn’t repeat, analysis always requires simplification and assumptions to fill out a model where data is insufficient.
Only with all of Education, Experience and Analysis is Risk Intelligence achievable and even then it is not guaranteed.
And in addition, Education, Experience and Analysis are the cure for the irrational biases found by the psychologists. I would bet that the psychologists systematically excluded any responses from a person with Risk Intelligence. That would have invalidated their investigation.
Their conclusion could have been that many of us need basic financial and risk education, better understanding of how to accumulate helpful experiences and some basic analytical skills. Not as much fun as a long list of cutely names biases, but much more helpful.
Explore posts in the same categories: Enterprise Risk ManagementTags: Behavioral Economics, Business, Enterprise Risk Management, Financial, Insurance, Rationality, Risk, Risk Management
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