Inherent risk

Category: Risk management frameworks · Reviewed by Amy Price, Account Executive · Last reviewed

Inherent risk

Inherent risk is the level of risk that exists in the absence of any controls or mitigation. It is the “gross” position — what could happen if the business activity were carried out as designed with no risk treatment in place.

Why measure inherent risk at all?

Some practitioners argue inherent risk is hypothetical and a distraction. The counter-argument — and the dominant practice in insurer ERM — is that measuring inherent risk:

Practical scoring

Inherent risk is typically scored on the same likelihood × impact grid as residual risk. To avoid theoretical absurdities (e.g. “what if we paid no claims at all?”), most practitioners score inherent risk as if normal commercial operations continued but discretionary risk-mitigation controls were absent.

References

Cross-references


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