I'd say it's a very good gamble! Remember that each underwritten life insurance policy is an obvious "gamble" even by your definition, but with the pricing based on carefully compiled acturarial tables and the law of large numbers, the overall uncertainty (risk of net loss) of the aggregate policies is very low. And that's a heck of a good bet! The clients are taking the other side of that bet because they do not have the luxury of large numbers which serve to substantially mitigate the insurer's risk.Quote from gnome:
That's your definition, not mine.... and while I don't know which (if either) is the correct and "official" definition, I chose to regard yours as incomplete.
I'll offer one more example, then I'll be done...
The life insurance business. Does that seem a "gamble"? The insurance company charges a premium significantly in excess of the probability of the insured dying... yet, there is "risk of loss" and "uncertainty of outcome" regarding each insured.
We're going in circles here, gnome. I perfectly understand where you are coming from. We just seem to be attaching different biases to certain words.
