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Risk governance

OECD Recommendation on the Governance of Critical Risks

 

Background


This Recommendation (pdf) is recognition of the escalating damages that occur due to extreme events. Total damage caused by natural and human-induced disasters in OECD and BRIC countries has been estimated at nearly USD 1.5 trillion over the last decade. New vulnerabilities and interconnections seem to amplify the economic impacts. Recent events are a stark warning for economic systems that are dependent on global supply chains.


The Recommendation proposes a fundamental shift in risk governance towards a whole of society effort. It proposes actions that governments can take at all levels of government, in collaboration with the private sector and with each other, to better assess, prevent, respond to and recover from the effects of extreme events, as well as take measures to build resilience to rebound from unanticipated events.

Making society more resilient to critical risks

  Identification and assessment of risks takes interlinkages and knock on effects into account. This helps set priorities and inform allocation of resources.
   
  More investment in risk prevention and mitigation such as investments in protective infrastructure, but also non-structural policies such as land use planning.
   
  Flexible capacities for preparedness, response and recovery help manage unanticipated and novel types of crises
   
  Good risk governance -transparent and accountable risk management systems that learn continuously and systematically from experience and research.

 

Read the Recommendation in:  English  French  Spanish  Japanese

See OECD Legal Instruments

 

What can governments and policy makers do to promote inclusiveness in risk governance?

 

Frame national policies for all-hazards risk management
Governments need to provide leadership with clearly articulated goals, and match their words with actions that supports identified priorities.


Engage the private sector in partnerships

The means to manage critical risks are not always in the hands of government. Partnerships that secure supply chains, reinforce business continuity, and foster the delivery of resources during emergencies are key.


Raise awareness of risks to increase stakeholder engagement in policy processes

The efficiency and effectiveness of risk governance is grounded in putting exposed populations on notice and providing them with the information they need to take protective measures.

 

Next steps


The OECD High Level Risk Forum will support dissemination of the Recommendation, including efforts by its members at all levels of government, and by non-Members to take account of and adhere to it.  The OECD High Level Risk Forum will also support the effort to monitor the implementation of the Recommendation and to report within three years.

 

 

Related Work 

OECD Reviews of Risk Management Policies

OECD Peer Reviews (France (Seine & Loire), Italy, Mexico, Colombia, Kazakhstan, Morocco)

OECD Studies in Risk Management