Risk aversion is a concept in economics, finance, and psychology explaining the behaviour of consumers and investors under uncertainty. Risk aversion is the reluctance of a person to accept a bargain with an uncertain payoff rather than another bargain with a more certain but possibly lower expected payoff. The inverse of a person's risk aversion is sometimes called their risk tolerance. For a more general discussion see the main article risk.
The average payoff of the bet, the expected value would be $50. The certain amount accepted instead of the bet is called the certainty equivalent, the difference between it and the expected value is called the risk premium.
The graph shows this situation for the risk-averse player: The utility of the bet,
is as big as that of the certainty equivalence, . The risk premium is
or 25%.
The following expressions relate to this term:
As for absolute risk aversion, the corresponding terms constant relative risk aversion (CRRA) and decreasing/increasing relative risk aversion (DRRA/IRRA) are used. This measure has the advantage that it is still a valid measure of risk aversion, even if it changes from risk-averse to risk-loving, i.e. is not strictly convex/concave over all .
from any initial wealth level turns down gambles where she loses $100 or gains $110, each with 50% probability [... will turn down 50-50 bets of losing $1,000 or gaining any sum of money.
The point is that if we calculate the constant relative risk aversion (CRRA) from the first small-stakes gamble it will be so great that the same CRRA, applied to gambles with larger stakes, will lead to absurd predictions. The bottom line is that we cannot infer a CRRA from one gamble and expect it to scale up to larger gambles.
The major solution to this problem is the one proposed by prospect theory.
Risk | Risk in Finance | Motivation | Economics of uncertainty
Risikoaversion | Aversion au risque | Riskaversion | Avversione al rischio
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Risk aversion".
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