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Inside this Article
Types
Of Life Insurance
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Life insurance may be divided into two basic classes –
temporary and permanent or following subclasses - term, universal, whole
life, variable, variable universal and endowment life insurance.
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Life
Insurance - Temporary
(Term)
Term life insurance (term assurance in British English)
provides for life insurance coverage for a specified term
of years for a specified premium. The policy does not accumulate
cash value. Term is generally considered "pure"
insurance, where the premium buys protection in the event of death
and nothing else. (See Theory of Decreasing Responsibility and buy
term and invest the difference.) Term insurance premiums
are typically low because both the insurer and the policy owner
agree that the death of the insured is unlikely during the term of
coverage.
The three key factors to be considered in term insurance are:
face amount (protection or death benefit), premium to be paid (cost to
the insured), and length of coverage (term).
Various (U.S.) insurance companies sell term insurance
with many different combinations of these three parameters. The face
amount can remain constant or decline. The term can be for one or more
years. The premium can remain level or increase. A common type of term
is called annual renewable term. It is a one year policy but the insurance
company guarantees it will issue a policy of equal or lesser amount
without regard to the insurability of the insured and with a premium set
for the insured's age at that time. Another common type of term
insurance is mortgage insurance, which is usually a level premium,
declining face value policy. The face amount is intended to equal the
amount of the mortgage on the policy owner’s residence so the mortgage
will be paid if the insured dies.
Guaranteed renewability is an important policy feature for any
prospective owner or insured to consider because it allows the insured
to acquire life insurance even if they become uninsurable.
Term assurance is a straightforward protection business. A policy
holder insures his life for a specified term. If he dies before that
specified term is up, his estate or named beneficiary(ies) receive(s) a
payout. If he does not die before the term is up, he receives nothing.
In the past these policies would almost always exclude suicide. However,
after a number of court judgments against the industry, payouts do occur
on death by suicide (presumably except for in the unlikely case that it
can be shown that the suicide was just to benefit from the policy).
Generally, if an insured person commits suicide within the first two
policy years, the insurer will return the premiums paid. However, a
death benefit will usually be paid if the suicide occurs after the two
year period.
Life
Insurance - Permanent
Permanent life insurance is life insurance that remains
in force until the policy matures (pays out), unless the owner fails to
pay the premium when due (the policy expires). The policy cannot be
cancelled by the insurer for any reason except fraud in the application,
and that cancellation must occur within a period of time defined by law
(usually two years). Permanent insurance builds a cash value that
reduces the amount at risk to the insurance company and thus the
insurance expense over time. This means that a policy with a million
dollars face value can be relatively inexpensive to a 70 year old
because the actual amount of insurance purchased is much less than one
million dollars. The owner can access the money in the cash value by
withdrawing money, borrowing the cash value, or surrendering the policy
and receiving the surrender value.
The three basic types of permanent insurance are whole life,
universal life, and endowment.
Life
Insurance - Whole life
coverage
Whole life insurance provides for a level premium, and a cash
value table included in the policy guaranteed by the company. The
primary advantages of whole life are guaranteed death benefits,
guaranteed cash values, fixed and known annual premiums, and mortality
and expense charges will not reduce the cash value shown in the policy.
The primary disadvantages of whole life are premium inflexibility, and
the internal rate of return in the policy may not be competitive with
other savings alternatives. Riders are available that can allow one to
increase the death benefit by paying additional premium. The death
benefit can also be increased through the use of policy dividends.
Dividends cannot be guaranteed and may be higher or lower than
historical rates over time. Premiums are much higher than term
insurance in the short-term, but cumulative premiums are roughly
equal if policies are kept in force until average life expectancy.
Cash value can be accessed at any time through policy
"loans". Since these loans decrease the death benefit if not
paid back, payback is optional. Cash values are not paid to the
beneficiary upon the death of the insured; the beneficiary receives the
death benefit only. In many policies, however, the cash value has been
automatically used to purchase additional death benefit, meaning that
the beneficiary is likely to receive more than base death benefit plus
cash value.
Life
Insurance - Universal
life coverage
Universal life insurance (UL) is a relatively new insurance
product intended to provide permanent insurance coverage with
greater flexibility in premium payment and the potential for a higher
internal rate of return. A universal life policy includes a cash
account. Premiums increase the cash account. Interest is paid within the
policy (credited) on the account at a rate specified by the company.
This rate has a guaranteed minimum but usually is higher than that
minimum. Mortality charges and administrative costs are charged against
(reduce) the cash account. The surrender value of the policy is the
amount remaining in the cash account less applicable surrender charges,
if any.
With all life insurance, there are basically two functions
that make it work. There's a mortality function and a cash function. The
mortality function would be the classical notion of pooling risk where
the premiums paid by everybody else would cover the death benefit for
the one or two who will die for a given period of time. The cash
function inherent in all life insurance says that if a person is
to reach age 95 to 100 (the age varies depending on state and company),
then the policy matures and endows the face value of the policy.
Actuarially, it is reasoned that out of a group of 1000 people, if
even 10 of them live to age 95, then the mortality function alone will
not be able to cover the cash function. So in order to cover the cash
function, a minimum rate of investment return on the premiums will be
required in the event that a policy matures.
Universal life policies guarantees, to some extent, the death
proceeds, but not the cash function - thus the flexible premiums and
interest returns. If interest rates are high, then the dividends help
reduce premiums. If interest rates are low, then the customer would have
to pay additional premiums in order to keep the policy in force. When
interest rates are above the minimum required, then the customer has the
flexibility to pay less as investment returns cover the remainder to
keep the policy in force.
The universal life policy addresses the perceived disadvantages of
whole life. Premiums are flexible. The internal rate of return is
usually higher because it moves with the financial markets. Mortality
costs and administrative charges are known. And cash value may be
considered more easily attainable because the owner can discontinue
premiums if the cash value allows it. And universal life has a more
flexible death benefit because the owner can select one of two death
benefit options, Option A and Option B.
Option A pays the face amount at death as it's designed to have the
cash value equal the death benefit at age 95. Option B pays the face
amount plus the cash value, as it's designed to increase the net death
benefit as cash values accumulate. Option B does carry with it a caveat.
This caveat is that in order for the policy to keep its tax favored life
insurance status, it must stay within a corridor specified by state
and federal laws that prevent abuses such as attaching a million dollars
in cash value to a two dollar insurance policy. The interesting part
about this corridor is that for those people who can make it to age
95-100, this corridor requirement goes away and your cash value can
equal exactly the face amount of insurance. If this corridor is ever
violated, then the universal life policy will be treated as, and in
effect turn into, a Modified Endowment Contract (or more commonly
referred to as a MEC).
But universal life has its own disadvantages which stem primarily
from this flexibility. The policy lacks the fundamental guarantee that
the policy will be in force unless sufficient premiums have been paid
and cash values are not guaranteed.
Universal life policies are sometimes erroneously referred to as
self-sustaining policies. In the 1980s, when interest rates were high,
the cash value accumulated at a more accelerated rate, and universal
life coverage was often sold by agents as a policy that could be
self-paying. Many policies did sustain themselves for a prolonged
period, but the combination of lower interest rates and an increasing
cost of insurance as the insured ages meant that for many policies, the
cash option was diminished or depleted.
Variable universal life Insurance
(VUL) is not the same as
universal life, even though they both have cash values attached to them.
These differences are in how the cash accounts are managed; thus having
a great effect on how they are treated for taxation. The cash account
within a VUL is held in the insurer's "separate account"
(generally in mutual funds, managed by a fund manager).
Life
Insurance - Limited-pay
Another type of permanent insurance is Limited-pay life
insurance, in which all the premiums are paid over a specified
period after which no additional premiums are due to keep the policy in
force. Common limited pay periods include 10-year, 20-year, and paid-up
at age 65.
Life
Insurance - Endowments
Endowments are policies in which the cash value built up inside the
policy, equals the death benefit (face amount) at a certain age. The age
this commences is known as the endowment age. Endowments are
considerably more expensive (in terms of annual premiums) than either
whole life or universal life because the premium paying period is
shortened and the endowment date is earlier.
In the United States, the Technical Corrections Act of 1988 tightened
the rules on tax shelters (creating modified endowments). These follow
tax rules as annuities and IRAs do.
Endowment Insurance is paid out whether the insured lives or dies,
after a specific period (e.g. 15 years) or a specific age (e.g. 65).
Life
Insurance - Accidental
death
Accidental death is a limited life insurance that is designed
to cover the insured when they pass away due to an accident. Accidents
include anything from an injury, but do not typically cover any deaths
resulting from health problems or suicide. Because they only cover
accidents, these policies are much less expensive than other life
insurances.
It is also very commonly offered as "accidental death and
dismemberment insurance", also known as an AD&D policy.
In an AD&D policy, benefits are available not only for
accidental death, but also for loss of limbs or bodily functions such as
sight and hearing, etc.
Accidental death and AD&D policies very rarely pay
a benefit; either the cause of death is not covered, or the coverage is
not maintained after the accident until death occurs. To be aware of
what coverage they have, an insured should always review their policy
for what it covers and what it excludes. Often, it does not cover an
insured who puts themselves at risk in activities such as: parachuting,
flying an airplane, professional sports, or involvement in a war
(military or not).
Accidental death benefits can also be added to a standard life
insurance policy as a rider. If this rider is purchased, the policy
will generally pay double the face amount if the insured dies due to an
accident. This used to be commonly referred to as a double indemnity
coverage.
Life
Insurance - Death
proceeds
Upon the insured's death, the insurer requires
acceptable proof of death before it pays the claim. The normal
minimum proof required is a death certificate and the insurer's
claim form completed, signed (and typically notarized). If the
insured's death is suspicious and the policy amount is large, the
insurer may investigate the circumstances surrounding the death
before deciding whether it has an obligation to pay the claim.
Proceeds from the policy may be paid as a lump sum or as an
annuity, which is paid over time in regular recurring payments for
either a specified period or for a beneficiary's lifetime
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