<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>				<article id="2124137191"><artname>Risk Management in Personal Finance</artname><image file="823927_ec.jpg" align="left" alt="Photo of Assorted Medical Items" /><p>Whether you are investing for your <glossary def="Termination of employment due to age, choice, or physical limitation. Certain benefits, such as Social Security payments, are available to those who retire. In finance, retirement is the paying of a debt when or before it is due." primary="Retirement">retirement</glossary> or for more immediate financial needs, there are only three things that can keep you from achieving your goals: <glossary def="A rise in the general price level of goods and services; inflation is the opposite of deflation. The Consumer Price Index and the Producer Price Index are the most common measures of inflation. As a probable result of inflation, labor asks for higher wages to buy more, prices rise to meet those wages, and inflation becomes a cycle." primary="Inflation">inflation</glossary>, <glossary def="A payment to federal, state, and/or local governments based on the sales price of a product, on worker income, or on other property and activities." primary="Tax">taxes</glossary>, and <glossary def="The chance of loss due to the uncertainty of future events. Risks can be in political systems, unforeseen changes in management, investor emotions, etc. Uncertainties in exchange rates, interest rates, inflation, loss of principal, etc. are also considered risk." primary="Risk">risk</glossary>. It is easy to plan for inflation and to reduce taxes, but risk is another matter because it is so unpredictable. It can come in many forms, but the results are always the same: <nodef>loss</nodef> of <nodef>money</nodef>. It might be due to <nodef>loss</nodef> of family <glossary def="The monetary return on one's labor or investments. Income may be wages, salaries, bonuses, dividends, or interest." primary="Income">income</glossary> from death, <glossary def="Inability to work because of illness or accident." primary="Disability">disability</glossary>, illness, legal action, or other circumstances beyond your control.</p><p>Risk is the possibility of <glossary def="1. In financial terms, the result of expenses exceeding income. 2. A reduction in the value of an investment." primary="Loss">loss</glossary>. Sometimes the loss is trivial, while at other times it may cause major personal and financial hardship. There is no way to eliminate all risk, but there are ways to avoid, minimize, or protect yourself and your family from risk. When risk is low, or the cost is not too high, it is easy to assume risk. When it is too costly to assume risk, you need other ways to manage it. <glossary def="A contract in which one party, called the insurer, agrees to protect another party, called the insured, against loss, damage, or medical costs in return for a premium. Another way to look at insurance is to see it as the assumption of risk by another party. In return for a periodic fee (the premium) and a set of requirements by which to abide, an insurance company will assume risks taken by those covered. Insurance companies are regulated by the insurance commissioners of their respective states or territories." primary="Insurance">Insurance</glossary> provides a convenient way to manage financial loss due to catastrophic risk.</p><p>You can manage risk in four ways:</p><ulist><item>Assume risk</item><item>Avoid risk</item><item><nodef>Share</nodef> risk</item><item>Transfer risk to someone else</item></ulist><p>When you assume risk, you do nothing to minimize the financial impact of loss should a hazard occur. For example, you don't buy fire or flood insurance on your home or you don't have life, disability, or <glossary def="An insurance contract that protects against financial loss due to physical or mental illness. " primary="Health Insurance">health insurance</glossary> <nodef>coverage</nodef>. Should a risk occur, you must pay the full cost of the loss out of your own <glossary def="Anything of value that a person or organization owns. Examples include cash, securities, accounts receivable, inventory, and property such as land, office equipment, or a house or car. (Compare with liability. The same item can be both an asset and a liability, depending on one's point of view. For example, a loan is a liability to the borrower because it represents money owed that has to be repaid. But to the lender, a loan is an asset because it represents money the lender will receive in the future as the borrower repays the debt.)" primary="Asset">assets</glossary>. This can adversely affect your financial goals for you and your family.</p><p>Avoiding risk may not be easy, but there are ways to lower risk management <glossary def="What one must pay for materials, services, and other necessities to operate a business, organization, or household." primary="Costs">costs</glossary> by doing so. Risk avoidance can lower the financial cost of risk, which is why <glossary def="A periodic payment for protection against loss. The size of the payment is based on various risk factors. For example, auto insurance premium depends partly on one's age." primary="Insurance Premium">insurance premiums</glossary> are lower for persons and <glossary def="1. An entity that engages in commercial activities in some particular sector, such as industry, retail, or professional services. 2. The commercial activity in which a business engages." primary="Business">businesses</glossary> that take measures to lower risk. For example, automobile insurance premiums are lower for drivers with good driving records (no accidents and no cited violations of driving laws), and non-smokers pay lower medical insurance and life insurance premiums than smokers do.</p><callout align="right">There is no way to eliminate all risk, but there are ways to avoid, minimize, or protect yourself and your family from risk.</callout><p>Sharing risk divides the cost of risk among those who participate. In a household where there are two earners, although the family income might be reduced should one earner lose his or her income, all is not lost, especially if only one earner's income is necessary to achieve the financial goals. Some insurance policies allow you to <nodef>share</nodef> the risks with the insurer in order to get a lower <glossary def="1. A regular periodic payment for an insurance policy. 2. An additional cost above the normal cost. 3. The amount by which a security sells above its par value. If an investor buys a $1,000 bond for $1,030, she has paid a premium of $30." primary="Premium">premium</glossary>. If you can assume a certain amount of <glossary def="The likelihood that an investment asset will fail or succeed based upon the underlying company's management ability and financial strength." primary="Financial Risk">financial risk</glossary>, then the insurance premium on the <nodef>balance</nodef> of the risk <nodef>will</nodef> be lower. For example, some automobile policies have lower premiums if you are willing to take responsibility for the first $500 of <glossary def="Something owed to another party. The same item of value can be both an asset and a liability, depending on one's point of view. For example, to the borrower a loan is a liability because it represents money owed that has to be repaid. But to the lender, a loan is an asset because it represents money the lender will receive in the future when the debt is repaid." primary="Liability">liability</glossary>, known as a <glossary def="1. The amount an insurance policyholder must pay on their own for medical services before the insurance policy coverage begins. 2. Able to be subtracted from one's adjusted gross income to reduce the amount of income subject to tax." primary="Deductible">deductible</glossary>. Medical insurance premiums can also be lowered if you have higher co-payments.</p><p>Finally, for those who cannot tolerate any financial risk, risk can be transferred to someone else, usually an insurance company, who assumes full responsibility for it. Of course, this method of risk management has the highest premium cost. An insurer <nodef>will</nodef> pay the costs of loss to an insured in consideration of a fee called a premium, which is usually a very small fraction of the <glossary def="The amount to be paid to an insurance policyholder or a beneficiary at retirement, death, or at the end of a period of insurance or other coverage. In retirement planning, benefits are the amount to be paid upon retirement." primary="Benefit">benefits</glossary> to be paid.</p><p>Insurance works because an insurer can determine the mathematical probability of a risk occurring, and the financial risk at stake. Anyone who owns an automobile knows that he or she is required to have automobile insurance to cover the risk of damage to someone else. With many years of statistics on automobile damage costs, insurers are able to determine the amount of premium necessary to provide benefits to insure automobile owners. Using the same principles, one can buy insurance to minimize financial loss due to accident, natural disaster, legal liability, illness, disability, and even death. The purpose of insurance is to provide financial relief from catastrophic losses. <glossary def="The medium of exchange used in trade or commerce." primary="Money">Money</glossary> from many people is pooled to pay for losses incurred by a few.</p><p>When planning your financial goals, you need to consider the risks to your income, <glossary def="1. Wealth in the form of cash or property that can be used to earn income. 2. The net worth of a business, which is the amount by which its assets are greater than its liabilities. 3. What one owns free and clear." primary="Capital">capital</glossary>, and <glossary def="The purchase of a potentially appreciable asset such as a stock, a bond, a property, or a unit of production. The purchase provides funds for the growth of businesses and governments." primary="Investment">investments</glossary>. Prudent investors evaluate their <glossary def="The amount of loss an investor can sustain in an investment. " primary="Risk Tolerance">risk tolerance</glossary> and make appropriate investments to assure that they <nodef>will</nodef> achieve their goals despite the potential risks that may befall them.</p></article>	