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What are the risks that high income may bring?

High income often corresponds to high pollution, high difficulty, and high risk factors in the working environment. For example: a seafarer with a monthly salary of 10,000 to 20,000 yuan, the corresponding work characteristics are more difficult and the risk factor is higher. Workers engaged in coal mine excavation: The working environment is highly polluted, harmful to the body, and the risk factor is high.

1. Examples of high-income and high-risk situations include: "water ghosts" on construction sites. It is said that each time they go down a well, they pay at least 20,000 yuan. Such a high-paying occupation must also be very dangerous, because it involves going down to a construction site. Fish out the piles.

Although it sounds easy, it is very difficult to do. It is not like swimming in the water to retrieve things. The salvager has to swim in a liquid full of sticky sediment, and the resistance is very high. It is also very physically demanding. If you cannot keep up with your physical strength, you may not be able to get up halfway through the swim, or even lose your life. Because it is too dangerous and can lead to death if you are not careful, this job is also called "water ghost".

2. High risk comes with high income. After all, you can get a reward of 20,000 yuan in one go, which is a lot of money for many people. If the drill bit can be salvaged, an additional 40,000 yuan will be added, because the drill bit itself is of high value and is very precious to the builders.

If you lose your life, you will get a higher reward, which may even reach millions of dollars. But for salvagers, every salvage operation is a gamble with your life, and no matter how high the reward is, it will be a gamble. Taking the risk of "making money if you have life, but spending money if you don't have life".

Related concepts

1. Risk factors: refers to conditions or factors that can produce or increase the probability and extent of loss. It is the potential cause of risk and the intrinsic or indirect cause of loss.

2. Risk events: refer to accidental events that cause losses. It is the external cause or direct cause of the loss. Such as fire, lightning, earthquake and other events. Here we should pay attention to distinguish risk events from risk factors. For example, if a car accident causes casualties due to brake failure, the brake failure is a risk factor and the car accident is a risk event.

3. Loss: refers to unintentional, unplanned and unanticipated decrease in economic value, usually measured in monetary units.

4. Risk management: Risk management is a process of identifying, determining and measuring risks, and formulating, selecting and implementing risk treatment plans.

5. Risk management process: including risk identification, risk evaluation, risk countermeasures, decision-making, decision-making implementation, and inspection.

6. The goal of risk management: before a risk event occurs, its primary goal is to minimize potential losses, followed by reducing worries and the value of corresponding worries. After a risk event occurs, its primary goal is to minimize actual losses. Losses are reduced to a minimum.