WHAT IS PERIL AND HAZARD?
WHAT IS PERIL AND HAZARD?
PERIL
 We
 often use the word risk to mean both the event which will give rise to 
some loss, and the factors which may influence the outcome of a loss. 
When we think about cause, we must be clear that there are at least 
these two aspects to it. We can see this if we think back to the two 
houses on the river bank and the risk of flood. The risk of flood does 
not really make sense, what we mean is the risk of flood damage. Flood 
is the cause of the loss and the fact that one of the houses was right 
on the bank of the river influences the outcome.
Flood
 is the peril and the proximity of the house to the river is the hazard.
 The peril is the prime cause; it is what will give rise to the loss. 
Often it is beyond the control of anyone who may be involved. In this 
way we can say that storm, fire, theft, motor accident and explosion are
 all perils.
Peril
 is defined as the cause of loss. Thus, if a house burns because of a 
fire, the peril, or cause of, loss, is the fire. If a car is totally 
destroyed in an accident with another motorist, accident (collision) is 
the peril, or cause of loss. Some common perils that result in the loss 
or destruction of property include fire, cyclone, storm, landslide, 
lightning, earthquakes, theft, and burglary.
Hazard
Factors,
 which may influence the outcome, are referred to as hazards. These 
hazards are not themselves the cause of the loss, but they can increase 
or decrease the effect should a peril operate. The consideration of 
hazard is important when an insurance company is deciding whether or not
 it should insure some risk and what premium to charge. So a hazard is a
 condition that creates or increases the chance of loss. There are three
 major types of hazards: Hazard can be physical or moral or Morale.
Physical hazard
Physical
 hazard relates to the physical characteristics of the risk, such as the
 nature of construction of a building, security protection at a shop or 
factory, or the proximity of houses to a riverbank. Therefore a physical
 hazard is a physical condition that increases the chances of loss. 
Thus, if a person owns an older building with defective wiring, the 
defective wiring is a physical hazard that increases the chance of a 
fire.
Another example of physical hazard is a slippery road after the rains. If a motorist loses control of his car on
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 slippery road and collides with another motorist, the slippery road is a
 physical hazard while collision is the peril, or cause of loss.
Moral hazard
Moral
 hazard concerns the human aspects which may influence the outcome. 
Moral hazard is dishonesty or character defects in an individual that 
increase the chance of loss. For example, a business firm may be 
overstocked with inventories because of a severe business recession. If 
the inventory is insured, the owner of the firm may deliberately burn 
the warehouse to collect money from the insurer. In effect, the unsold 
inventory has been sold to the insurer by the deliberate loss. A large 
number of fires are due to arson, which is a clear example of moral 
hazard.
Moral
 hazard is present in all forms of insurance, and it is difficult to 
control. Dishonest insured persons often rationalise their actions on 
the grounds that "the insurer has plenty of money". This is incorrect 
since the company can pay claims only by collecting premiums from other 
policy owners.
Because
 of moral hazard, premiums are higher for all insured, including the 
honest. Although an individual may believe that it is morally wrong to 
steal from a neighbour, he or she often has little hesitation about 
stealing from an insurer and other policy owners by either causing a 
loss or by inflating the size of a claim after a loss occurs.
Morale hazard
This
 usually refers to the attitude of the insured person. Morale hazard is 
defined as carelessness or indifference to a loss because of the 
existence of insurance. The very presence of insurance causes some 
insurers to be careless about protecting their property, and the chance 
of loss is thereby increased. For example, many motorists know their 
cars are insured and, consequently, they are not too concerned about the
 possibility of loss through theft. Their lack of concern will often 
lead them to leave their cars unlocked.
The chance of a loss by theft is thereby increased because of the existence of insurance.
Morale
 hazard should not be confused with moral hazard. Morale hazard refers 
to an Insured who is simply careless about protecting his property 
because the property is insured against loss.
Moral
 hazard is more serious since it involves unethical or immoral behaviour
 by insurers who seek their own financial gain at the expense of 
insurers and other policy owners. Insurers attempt to control both moral
 and morale hazards by careful underwriting and by various policy 
provisions, such as compulsory excess, waiting periods, exclusions, and 
exceptions.
When
 used in conjunction with peril and hazard we find that risk means the 
likelihood that the hazard will indeed cause the peril to operate and 
cause the loss. For example, if the hazard is old electrical wiring 
prone to shorting and causing sparks, and the peril is fire, then the 
risk is the likelihood that the wiring will indeed be a cause of fire.
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