The objective of Risk Analysis in Theory and Practice is to present this analytical framework and to illustrate how it can be used in the investigation of economic decisions under risk. In a sense, the economics of risk is a difficult subject: it involves understanding human decisions in the absence of perfect information. How do we make decisions when we do not know some of events affecting us? The complexities of our uncertain world and of how humans obtain and process information make this difficult. In spite of these difficulties, much progress has been made. First, probability theory is the corner stone of risk assessment. This allows us to measure risk in a fashion that can be communicated among decision makers or researchers. Second, risk preferences are now better understood. This provides useful insights into the economic rationality of decision making under uncertainty. Third, over the last decades, good insights have been developed about the value of information. This helps better understand the role of information in human decision making and this book provides a systematic treatment of these issues in the context of both private and public decisions under uncertainty.
- Balanced treatment of conceptual models and applied analysis
- Considers both private and public decisions under uncertainty
- Website presents application exercises in Excel
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Elsevier Science & Techn.
ISBN-13
978-0-08-051633-2 (9780080516332)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Table of ContentChapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: The Measurement of Risk Chapter 3: The Expected Utility ModelChapter 4: Risk PreferencesChapter 5: Stochastic DominanceChapter 6: Mean-Variance AnalysisChapter 7: Alternative Models of Risk BehaviorChapter 8: Production Decisions under RiskChapter 9: Portfolio SelectionChapter 10: Dynamic Decisions under RiskChapter 11: Contract and Policy Design under RiskChapter 12: Some ApplicationsChapter 13: Market StabilizationAppendix A: Probability and StatisticsAppendix B: Optimization