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Life
Insurance Life insurance policies are issued in two basic types: term life and permanent (whole) life. Term life insurance, in a level term form, requires fixed, regular premiums and pays the death benefit, also called the principle sum, only if the insured dies during the policy's term. There are no cash values built under these policies. Whole life insurance also requires fixed, regular premiums and pays the death benefit when the insured dies. Because the level premium in the early years of such a policy exceeds the average cost of claims and expenses there are moneys available to be invested. The policy owner has access to these invested amounts via the policy's surrender value. Surrender values are not usually available in the first few years of the policy because of high initial expenses. In this sense a whole-life policy has an investment component. Therefore, whole-life insurance is more expensive than term life. Documents that may be required for payment on life insurance include: a
death certificate stating that a person died on a particular date. Under
both types of annuity it is possible to include guaranteed periods for
payments e.g. 5 or 10 years. Both the commencement of benefit payments
and the effect of the death of the annuitant (the beneficiary after
payments start) may depend on the survival of another life (lives) or
the death of another life (lives). Such annuities are called contingent
annuities and are common under pension plans and estate settlements
e.g. when the pensioner dies his benefit will continue at 60% of its
level to a surviving spouse. |
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