Behavioral risk management : managing the psychology that drives decisions and influences operational risk
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Bibliographic Information
Behavioral risk management : managing the psychology that drives decisions and influences operational risk
Palgrave Macmillan, 2016
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The psychological dimension of managing risk is of crucial importance, and its study has led to the identification of specific do's and don'ts. Those with an understanding of the psychology underlying risk and the skills to recognize its manifestation in practice, have the opportunity to develop frameworks that embody the do's and don'ts, thereby producing sound judgments and good decisions. Those lacking the understanding and the skills are destined to be more hit and miss in their approach to risk management, doing the don'ts and not doing the do's. Virtually every major risk management catastrophe in the last fifteen years has psychological pitfalls at its root. The list of catastrophes includes the 2008 bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers and subsequent global financial crisis, the 2010 explosion at BP's Macondo well in the Gulf of Mexico and the 2011 nuclear meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant.
A critical lesson from psychological studies for those involved in risk management is that people's judgments and decisions about risk vary with type of circumstance. In Behavioral Risk Management readers will learn that there are specific actions that organizations can undertake to incorporate understanding, recognition, and behavioral interventions into the practice of risk management. There are many examples throughout the book that illustrate doing the don'ts. The chapters in the first part of the book introduce the main ideas, and the chapters in the latter part provide insight into how to apply those ideas to the practical world in which risk managers operate.
Table of Contents
Preface
1. Introduction
2. Three Key Emotions
3. Prospect Theory: Three Cognitive Issues
4. Personality and Risk
5. Biases and Risk
6. Process, Pitfalls, and Culture
7. Minsky, the Financial Instability Hypothesis, and Risk Management
8. Psychology and Ponzi Finance at UBS and Merrill Lynch
9. Moody's and S&P
10. Fannie, Freddie, and AIG
11. RBS, Fortis, and ABN AMRO
12. Behavioral Dimension of Systemic Risk
13. Financial Regulation and Psychology
14. Risk of Fraud, Madoff, and the SEC
15. Risk, Return, and Individual Stocks
16. How Psychology Brought Down MF Global
17. JP Morgan's Whale of a Risk Management Failure
18. Con Ed, BP and MMS
19. Southwest Airlines, General Motors, and the Agencies that Regulate Them
20. Conclusion
Appendices?
by "Nielsen BookData"