首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Why risks can go wrong Human intuition is a bad guide to handling risk. A People make terrible decisions about t
Why risks can go wrong Human intuition is a bad guide to handling risk. A People make terrible decisions about t
admin
2014-12-30
44
问题
Why risks can go wrong
Human intuition is a bad guide to handling risk.
A People make terrible decisions about the future. The evidence is all around, from their investments in the stock markets to the way they run their businesses. In fact, people are consistently bad at dealing with uncertainty, underestimating some kinds of risk and overestimating others. Surely there must be a better way than using intuition?
B In the 1960s a young American research psychologist, Daniel Kahneman, became interested in people’s inability to make logical decisions. That launched him on a career to show just how irrationally people behave in practice. When Kahneman and his colleagues first started work, the idea of applying psychological insights to economics and business decisions was seen as rather bizarre. But in the past decade the fields of behavioural finance and behavioural economics have blossomed, and in 2002 Kahneman shared a Nobel Prize in economics for his work. Today he is in demand by business organisations and international banking companies. But, he says, there are plenty of institutions that still fail to understand the roots of their poor decisions. He claims that, far from being random, these mistakes are systematic and predictable.
C One common cause of problems in decisionmaking is over-optimism. Ask most people about the future, and they will see too much blue sky ahead, even if past experience suggests otherwise. Surveys have shown that people’s forecasts of future stock market movements are far more optimistic than past long-term returns would justify. The same goes for their hopes of ever-rising prices for their homes or doing well in games of chance. Such optimism can be useful for managers or sportsmen, and sometimes turns into a self-fulfilling prophecy. But most of the time it results in wasted effort and dashed hopes. Kahneman’s work points to three types of over-confidence. First, people tend to exaggerate their own skill and prowess; in polls, far fewer than half the respondents admit to having below-average skills in, say, driving. Second, they overestimate the amount of control they have over the future, forgetting about luck and chalking up success solely to skill. And third, in competitive pursuits such as dealing on shares, they forget that they have to judge their skills against those of the competition.
D Another source of wrong decisions is related to the decisive effect of the initial meeting, particularly in negotiations over money. This is referred to as the ’anchor effect’. Once a figure has been mentioned, it takes a strange hold over the human mind. The asking price quoted in a house sale, for example, tends to become accepted by all parties as the ’anchor’ around which negotiations take place. Much the same goes for salary negotiations or mergers and acquisitions. If nobody has much information to go on, a figure can provide comfort — even though it may lead to a terrible mistake.
E In addition, mistakes may arise due to stubbornness. No one likes to abandon a cherished belief, and the earlier a decision has been taken, the harder it is to abandon it. Drug companies must decide early to cancel a failing research project to avoid wasting money, but may find it difficult to admit they have made a mistake. In the same way, analysts may have become wedded early to a single explanation that coloured their perception. A fresh eye always helps.
F People also tend to put a lot of emphasis on things they have seen and experienced themselves, which may not be the best guide to decision-making. For example, somebody may buy an overvalued share because a relative has made thousands on it, only to get his fingers burned. In finance, too much emphasis on information close at hand helps to explain the tendency by most investors to invest only within the country they live in. Even though they know that diversification is good for their portfolio, a large majority of both Americans and Europeans invest far too heavily in the shares of their home countries. They would be much better off spreading their risks more widely.
G More information is helpful in making any decision but, says Kahneman, people spend proportionally too much time on small decisions and not enough on big ones. They need to adjust the balance. During the boom years, some companies put as much effort into planning their office party as into considering strategic mergers.
H Finally, crying over spilled milk is not just a waste of time; it also often colours people’s perceptions of the future. Some stock market investors trade far too frequently because they are chasing the returns on shares they wish they had bought earlier.
I Kahneman reckons that some types of businesses are much better than others at dealing with risk. Pharmaceutical companies, which are accustomed to many failures and a few big successes in their drug-discovery programmes, are fairly rational about their risk-taking. But banks, he says, have a long way to go. They may take big risks on a few huge loans, but are extremely cautious about their much more numerous loans to small businesses, many of which may be less risky than the big ones. And the research has implications for governments too. They face a whole range of sometimes conflicting political pressures, which means they are even more likely to take irrational decisions.
Reading Passage 1 has nine paragraphs A-l.
Choose the correct heading for Paragraphs B and D-H from the list of headings below. Write the correct number(i-xi)in boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet.
List of headings
i Not identifying the correct priorities
ii A solution for the long term
iii The difficulty of changing your mind
iv Why looking back is unhelpful
v Strengthening inner resources
vi A successful approach to the study of decision-making
vii The danger of trusting a global market
viii Reluctance to go beyond the familiar
ix The power of the first number
x The need for more effective risk assessment
xi Underestimating the difficulties ahead
Example Answer
Paragraph A x
Paragraph C xi
Paragraph G
选项
答案
i
解析
... people spend proportionally too much time on small decisions and not enough on big ones.
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/PtNO777K
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
Themedianoffivepeople’s(A,B,C,DandE)salaryis20,000andtherangeofthemisnomorethan50,000.IfthesalaryofA
AlthoughmostpeoplewhoacquireWestNilehaveno______andthosewhodonormallysufferlittlemorethanflu-likeillness,it
Ancientpeoplefeltmuch______concerningthenotionthattheappearanceofcometswasinauspicious,butneverthelessexhibited
NewYorkCityisfullofpeoplelikeMr.O’Neal-life-longbibliophileswithaaccumulation,holedupincompactspacesinthein
Ashasalwaysbeenthecasewhentragedyhasstruckourcommunity,thepeopleofourtownfeeltheobligation,andrightlyso,t
Duringthe1930sNationalAssociationfortheAdvancementofColoredPeople(NAACP)attor-neysCharlesH.Houston,Wi
Duringthe1930sNationalAssociationfortheAdvancementofColoredPeople(NAACP)attor-neysCharlesH.Houston,Wi
随机试题
HowdoyouexplaineconomicsinplainEnglish?TheFederalReserveBankofNewYorkhasbeenansweringthequestionwithaneven
商业汇票
男性,41岁。2年前有尿道外伤史,近半年来尿痛、尿线中断。尿道扩张至18~20号。腹部平片膀胱区见1.8cm×1.0cm结石一枚。治疗应采取下列哪项措施
背景资料:某路桥施工企业中标承包某一级公路H合同段的路基施工。其中:K20+000~K21+30为填方路段,路线经过地带为旱地,原地面横坡平缓,该路段填土方53000m3,K21+320~K21+700为挖方路段,表面土质为砂性土,下为风化的砂岩,其强度
按照我国统一的会计制度规定,会计期间可划分为( )。
按照《2000年国际贸易术语解释通则》,买卖双方费用划分界线与风险划分界线相分离的贸易术语有()。
经《统计报表催报统计单》催报,仍然没有报送统计资料的,构成()统计资料的行为。
下列旋律片段选自()的作品。
老王正在Excel中计算员工本年度的年终奖金,他希望与存放在不同工作簿中的前三年的奖金发放情况进行比较,最优的操作方法是()
根据汉字国标GB2312-80的规定,存储一个汉字的内码需用的字节个数是
最新回复
(
0
)