Abstract
Biases in risk perception potentially have a large effect on insurance and risk-related behavior. The government can alter these perceptions either through informational programs or controlling the risk. Policies that convey a higher risk level generally have the expected effects on insurance and protective actions, whereas efforts that increase the precision of either the government risk information or private beliefs typically have ambiguous effects. In some cases, the structure of how government policies enter the risk-belief function is consequential. Ascertaining the magnitude of the effects, not simply the direction, also is an important issue. For example, misperceptions have a dramatic effect on the tradeoffs between compensating differentials and the size of the loss but a negligible effect on the tradeoff between compensating differentials and the magnitude of the probability.
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Presented at the Twenty-First Seminar of the European Group of Risk and Insurance Economists, Toulouse, September 1994.
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Viscusi, W. Government Action, Biases in Risk Perception, and Insurance Decisions. Geneva Risk Insur Rev 20, 93–110 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01098960
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01098960