Chapter 10: Life Insurance Planning and Purchasing Decisions Flashcards
human life value approach
An approach that measures a person’s human life
value in terms of the present value of that portion of estimated future earnings which, if he or she lives long enough to achieve all the earnings, will be used to
support dependents.
multiple of income approach
A simplistic approach that determines life insurance
needs based on the client’s current annual income. Takes into consideration already accumulated insurance.
financial needs analysis approach
An approach that determines how much life insurance is needed to provide a principal sum that will be liquidated to meet survivors’ lump-sum and ongoing income needs
capital needs analysis approach
An approach that determines how much life insurance is needed to provide a principal sum adequate to fund survivors’ needs while preserving the principal
Lump sum needs at death
- final illness costs that insurance does not cover
- repayment of outstanding debt, perhaps including a home mortgage loan that becomes due and payable upon death
- estate taxes, if applicable
- probate and attorney’s expenses
- funeral, burial, or cremation expenses, as applicable
- operational expenses to cover survivors’ ongoing, short-term household expenses
surrender cost index
The surrender cost index indicates the cost of surrendering the policy for the cash value at some future point in time, such as 20 years. The index shows the average amount of each annual premium that is not returned if the policy is surrendered for its cash value.
Measuring the cost of insurance
Premiums ($1,600 × 20) $32,000
Minus dividends 7,200
Minus cash value 28,000
Net cost –$ 3,200
Net cost per $1,000 –$ 32.00
(–$3,200 ÷ 100)
Net payment cost index
The other interest-adjusted cost index is the net payment cost index. This index evaluates
the cost of insurance protection based on the assumption that the insured dies at the end
of the policy’s 20th year. It is useful for a client who is more concerned with the death benefit
rather than the cash value.
Illustration rules
Each illustration used in the sale of a life insurance policy covered by the new regulation
must be clearly labeled “life insurance illustration” and must include the following:
1. name of the insurance company
2. name and business address of the insurer’s agent
3. name, age, and gender of the proposed insured
4. the underwriting or rating classification upon which the illustration is based
5. the generic name of the policy (for example, whole life, universal life, and so on)
6. the initial death benefit amount
7. the dividend option election or application of non guaranteed elements if
applicable
The NAIC model regulation prohibits insurers and their agents from the following:
- representing the policy as anything other than a life insurance policy
- using or describing nonguaranteed elements in a manner that is misleading or has the capacity or tendency to mislead
- stating or implying that the payment or amount of nonguaranteed elements is guaranteed
- using an illustration that does not comply with the illustration regulation
- using an illustration that is more favorable to the policyowner than the illustration based on the illustrated scale of the insurer
- providing an applicant with an incomplete illustration
- representing in any way that premium payments will not be required for each year of the policy in order to maintain the illustrated death benefits, unless that is the fact
- using the term “vanish,” “vanishing premium,” or a similar term that implies the policy becomes paid up, to describe a plan for using nonguaranteed elements to
pay a portion of future premiums - using an illustration that is not “self-supporting”
NAIC annual reports for universal life insurance illustrations must be sent to policy owners and must include:
• all transactions affecting the policy during the reporting period
• cash values at the beginning and end of the period
• death benefit at the end of the reporting period (for each life covered)
• the cash surrender value at the end of the period after deduction of surrender charge (if any)
• the amount of outstanding policy loans, if any, at the end of the report period
• a special Notice to Policyowners if the policy will not maintain insurance in force until the end of the next reporting period unless further premium payments are
made
Traditionally, most replacements were considered detrimental to the policyowner for at
least three reasons:
- The policyowner had already incurred the high first-year expenses associated with a new policy.
- Premiums under the new policy might be higher due to the insured’s increased age.
- The suicide and incontestable provisions under the existing policy might expire sooner, if they have not already done so, than those in the replacement policy.
1035 exchange
Sec. 1035 of the Internal Revenue Code permits a
policyowner who exchanges one insurance contract for another in a “like-kind exchange” to receive certain tax advantages.
1035 exchange rules
A life insurance contract may be exchanged for a life insurance contract or an annuity.
An annuity may be exchanged for an annuity, but an annuity may not be exchanged for life insurance.
Substandard risk and substandard coverage
an individual who belongs to a class with a higher-than-standard mortality rate is referred to as a substandard risk. Insurance on these individuals is called substandard coverage.
The majority of companies assume that each substandard applicant falls into one of three
broad groups:
- additional hazard increases with age (example: high blood pressure)
- additional hazard remains approximately constant (examples: occupational hazard, some physical impairments)
- additional hazard decreases with age (examples: past illnesses, surgical operations)
rate-up age method
If an applicant is substandard rates an insurance company may choose to rate the applicant at an age applicable to the conditions they see. I.e. a 25 year old male may be in the same category as a 33 year old male and therefor insured at the same rates as that group of individuals.
extra percentage tables
These extra percentage tables classify applicants
into groups based on the expected percentage of standard mortality and charge premiums that reflect the appropriate increase in mortality.