Moral hazard, what is it? And how it can negatively impact you.

in Project HOPE4 years ago (edited)

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The Story.

I always like to start my posts with a story, so here I go. Once upon a time there was a prince and a princess…

Nah, not that kind of story, hehe, let me try again :)

Last week one of our friends, I’ll call her Betty, said, “if I run into financial trouble, I can always turn to Esmerelda to help me out.” Esmerelda is a mutual friend.

On the surface, this seems fine, because that's what friends do, they help out other friends. But this kind of financial trouble is not about borrowing $5 for gas money. It's about defaulting on debt worth hundreds of thousands of dollars and losing everything she owns; house, car, etc...

My wife and I think the world of Betty. She is kind, generous, a good earner and a great friend for many years. But Betty has a debt and spending problem. And a case of moral hazard. Let me explain…

Moral Hazard.

Moral hazard is when a person (or group) has an incentive to increase risk and exposure, R&E, because they do not bear the full consequences of that R&E.

  • Risk is the probability of something bad happening.
  • Exposure is how much money you will lose if that bad thing does happen.

An example of moral hazard:

Say my dad buys me a new car.
I totally wreck my car and dad pays for the damages.
I'm thinking, “if I wreck my car again, dad will pay for the damages again.”
So why would I care about driving my car in a demolition-derby and destroying it, he'll just pay for it, there are no consequences (besides killing myself, haha).

I am suffering from moral hazard when:

  • I have an incentive to increase my R&E of wrecking my car (by driving it in a demolition-derby).
  • Because I don’t bear the full consequences of that R&E because my dad will pay for it.

Wait, a demolition derby sounds awesome! I'm going to call my dad…
Aaaah, he said he ain’t payin for shit, no fun for me :(

More examples include:

  • To make more money, home builders build in high-risk flood areas and sell those homes quickly so they don't bear the R&E of the homes flooding.
  • Or in the 2008 financial crisis, when investment banks created and sold poorly valued and risky assets to each other; inflating balance sheets, bonuses and stock prices...and in the end, government debt paid for most of it (plus some write downs).

Consequences of Moral hazard.

One of the big negative consequences of moral hazard is reckless behavior. It encourages a person to take risky bets with little regard for the consequences. But what is even worse, is that a person can suffer from moral hazard, and no help comes to bail them out.

Betty's case.

In Betty's case, moral hazard without the bailout, looks likely. Betty is living paycheck-to-paycheck, she has no emergency cash fund and her debt is five times her income (and she makes a great income). She has two jobs; one full-time and one almost full-time (she got the second job to pay for her spending habits). And she is barely keeping up with her debt payments.

A couple of weeks ago, she cried with joy that she got more hours with her second job, because she needed the extra money to pay for her credit card payments. And several times a week she tells us that she just bought something new; a couch, a ceiling fan, some new house decoration, going out to eat. She calls the spending "Creature Comforts," she says, “I deserve it.”

She tells us that Esmerelda will help her financially. She talks about the government paying off her loans, or her uncle giving her a stake in the family business. None of these things are true, there is no one coming to bail her out. Because no one has the means to do it.

In conclusion.

Suffering from moral hazard encourages people to increase the risk and exposure of doing something bad, with the hope that someone will help them out of that bad position; which is rarely the case. This kind of thinking puts people in financially dire situations that take years to dig out of and leads to a lot of preventable suffering.

Stay frosty people. Thanks for reading.

Reference:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_hazard

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Moral hazard is a terrible thing but it can be controlled through financial education and self discipline also, great post friend.

It is a terrible thing. And you nailed it, financial education and self-discipline, plus personal responsibility. I think those are great steps to take to combat moral hazard.

Thank you so much @eni-ola.

Moral hazard is immoral! and must be taken into account and handled with great care I think it depends a lot on the will of the person and on being always focused on the pr steps to take.

“being always focused on the pr steps to take.”

I like this statement. Keep focused on the process. Plus maybe having a little humility, and empathy, can go a long way in inhibiting moral hazard.

Good stuff @reinaldoverdu.

Most times people always based their belief that this life is all about risk ignoring the consequences side of the risk

Great point, actually, really great point @mandate. I definitely have observed this.

Hello friend I agree with you, many people give their responsibilities to others, for me it is something of an irresponsible and comfortable person. A person like that does not have a good future.

"A person like that does not have a good future."
A very true statement.

At the core, I am an optimist. And I hope when people do suffer from moral hazard, they change before the consequences bear down on them.

But knowing that old habits die hard, and the mistakes that I've made in the past, I am confronted with the reality of human nature. Some people need to go through the pain, to learn. Humans are weird, haha.

Thank you so much @franyeligonzalez for reading my post. 😁

 4 years ago 

Dear @fijimermaid

Finally I've found some time to catch up and read few previously bookmarked posts. Interesting choice of topic.

I always like to start my posts with a story, so here I go. Once upon a time there was a prince and a princess…
Nah, not that kind of story, hehe, let me try again :)

You've almost lost me already :P Next time start with a story for an adults :)

Back to main topic: Moral hazzard - I must admit, that I've never heard such an expression before.
Based on what you wrote, it's a bit similar to trading (not that I like trading or I'm good at it). We try to estimate risks and rewards/potential loses, before we place an order.

ps. based on your story, I would say that Becky is ... doomed. I could never understand people having solid paychecks and having huge debt. Maintaining cost of those debts alone must be frustrating ....

Have a great day buddy,
Yours, Piotr

LOL (in regards to the story)

Yeah, hedging risks in trading has some moral hazard.

For example, asset backed and debt securities, which are necessary for liquidity, can be used to offset risk/exposure to issue larger amounts of unsustainable debt at scale; like a house or a car loan that’s too much financial burden to the individual. The 2008 financial crisis exposed a lot of that, but it is still used today.

Yeah, I think Becky is in trouble. We have all introduced the financial conversation with her, but it never goes anywhere. But she is an adult, so why should she listen to us? 😒

But personal finance ‘face to face’ conversation is somewhat taboo in the US. I equate it with people running naked down the street, there may be a couple people crazy enough to do it, but most don’t...lol.

Thank you for the comment @crypto.piotr

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