Chapter 4: Key Terms Flashcards
Accelerated Benefits Provision
Entitles a qualified insured to receive a pre-death benefit deemed nontaxable
Annual Renewable Term (ART)
A type of term insurance that permits the policyholder to purchase term insurance in subsequent years without evidence of insurability, but premiums on the policy increase each year to reflect the increasing mortality risk being undertaken by the insurer
Annuity
Periodic payment to an individual that continues for a fixed period or for the duration of a designated life or lives
Asset Accumulation Phase
This phase is usually from the early 20s to late 50s when additional cash flow for investing is low and debt to net worth is high
Assignment
The process of transferring all or part of the policy’s ownership rights
Beneficiary
A person or institution legally entitled to receive benefits through a legal device, such as a will, trust, or life insurance policy
Buy-Sell Agreements
Arrangements that require the sale and purchase of securities owned by one individual to another following a specified triggering event, such as the death of a business owner
Capitalized-Earnings Approach
Method to determine life insurance needs that suggests the death benefits of a client’s life insurance should equal an income stream sufficient to meet the family’s needs without depleting the capital base
Conservation (Risk Management) Phase
This phase is from late 50s to early 70s, when cash flow assets and net worth have increased and debt has decreased somewhat. In addition, risk management of events like employment, disability due to illness or accident, and untimely death become a priority
Contingent Beneficiaries
Person(s) or organization(s) names to receive the death benefit if the primary beneficiary is not available to receive the policy proceeds
Corridor test
One of two congress-imposed tests to determine whether a life insurance contract meets the definition of a Modified Endowment Contract (MEC). This test calls for the policy to be tested using actuarial principles and requires the premiums to represent no more than a specified portion of the death benefits
Cross-Purchase Buy-Sell Agreement
An arrangement between individuals who agree to purchase the business interest of a deceased owner
Decreasing-Term Insurance
Type of term insurance that allows the owner to pay the same premium for the insurance protection each year. The death benefit on the policy will decrease each year to offset the increasing in mortality cost.
Distribution (Gifting) Phase
The phase from late 40s to end of life and occurs when the individual has high additional cash flow, low debt, and high net worth
Entity Purchase (Redemption) Agreement
Type of buy-sell agreement that obligates the business entity to purchase an owner’s interest in the entity upon that owner’s death
First-to-Die
A type of joint life insurance policy that covers two individuals, but the death benefit is paid upon the death of the first individual
Grace Period
A provision in most insurance policies that allows payment to be received for a certain period of time after the actual due date without a default or cancellation of the policy
Group Term Insurance
A type of life insurance coverage offered to a group of people (often a component of an employee benefit package) that provides benefits to the beneficiaries if the covered individual dies during the defined covered period