Risks, Perils, and Hazards
Peril
A cause of loss.
Hazard
A condition that may increase either the chance (frequency) or the amount (severity) of loss arising from a peril.
Uncertainty
A lack of knowledge of what will or will not happen in the future.
Morale Hazard
Careless attitudes on the part of insured persons toward the occurrence of loss that increase the chance and/or amount of loss.
Property Risk
Direct loss or damage, or indirect loss (i.e. income, expenses).
Static Risks
Involving losses that would occur even if there were no changes in the economy.
Personal Risk
Loss of income earning ability.
Classes of Pure Risk
Personal risk, property risk, and liability risks.
Speculative Risk
Refers to those situations which involve not only the possibility of loss, but also the possibility of gain.
Fundamental Risk
Risks involving losses that are impersonal in origin and consequence.
Particular Risk
Risks involving losses which are viewed as being essentially personal in origin and consequence.
Dynamic Risks
Risks resulting from changes in the economy.
Moral Hazard
The dishonest tendencies inherent in the character of an insured person that increase the chance and/or amount of loss.
Physical Hazard
The natural properties of objects and their impersonal surroundings that increase the chance and/or amount of loss.
Risk
The possibility of financial loss that exists as a state of the real world.
Liability Risk
Unintentional injury to other persons or damage of their property through negligence or carelessness.
Pure Risk
Used to designate those situations which involve only the possibility of loss or no loss.