Nature of Business Risks



 Nature of business risks can be understood in terms of their peculiar characteristics:

(i)                 Risk is an essential part of every business: Every business has some risk. No business can avoid risk, although the amount of risk may vary from business to business. Risk can be minimised, but cannot be eliminated.

(ii)                Business risks arise due to uncertainties: Uncertainty refers to the lack of knowledge about what is going to happen in future. Natural calamities, change in demand and prices, changes in government policies and prices, improvement in technology, etc., are some of the examples of uncertainty which create risks for business because the outcomes of these future events are not known.

(iii)              Degree of risk depends mainly upon the nature and size of business: Nature of business (i.e., type of goods and services produced and sold) and size of business (i.e., volume of production and sale) are the main factors which determine the amount of risk in a business. For example, a business dealing in fashionable items has a high degree of risk. Similarly, a largescale business generally has a higher risk than what a small scale has.

(iv)               Profit is the reward for risk taking: ‘No risk, no gain’ is an age-old principle which applies to all types of business. Greater the risk involved in a business, higher is the chance of profit. An entrepreneur undertakes risks under the expectation of higher profit. Profit is thus the reward for risk taking.