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Permanent Life
Insurance or Whole Life Insurance
Permanent life insurance is a form of life insurance such
as whole life or endowment, where the policy is for the life
of the insured, the payout is assured at the end of the
policy (assuming the policy is kept current) and the policy
accrues cash value. Permanent life insurance originally was offered as a fixed
premium fixed return product known as whole life insurance.
This offered consumers guaranteed cash value accumulation and
a consistent premium. The cash value that accrues
is legal defined as "unused premiums" as that is exactly
what it is. Whole life insurance is designed to insure the
individual up through age 100. As such, the premium dollars
are substantially high in the younger years since you are
not paying for only one year of risk but instead are paying
through age 100. One of professed benefits of this type of
insurance is that the premiums never change and remain
constant throughout the life of the insured making the
policy valuable for for older individuals as they will be
able to afford the premiums later on in life. But, that is
because they have been paying on the policy for their entire
life.
If an individual lives to age 100, and they own a whole life
insurance policy, then the policy matures at that point as
the individual has statistically reached the mortality rate
for which the actuary tables were created and they have, for
all intents and purposes, outlived the premiums and can
receive them back in the form of the cash value the policy
has accrued. Remember, the cash values are not a savings
program in a whole life insurance policy, but are legally
"unearned premiums" and therefore are the insurance
companies property. This is why you must borrow the cash
value that accumulates in the policy over time. In the
unfortunate event of death, any cash value stays with the
insurance company and the beneficiary of the deceased
receives the face amount of the life insurance policy.
Many companies offer
free rate quotes for whole life insurance policies,
and have a wide variety of permanent life insurance
plans to fit your needs.
Universal Life
Insurance
Universal life insurance is a permanent life insurance
policy that works on the premise of "buy
term and invest the difference." The cash value that
accumulates in the policy does so in a holding-bin type of
account where the actual cost of insuring against the risk
of dying (mortality rate expenses) are charged. Although the
premiums remain constant like those of a whole life
insurance policy, if the actuarial cost of the insurance
rises, or if the fees and other expenses charged against the
policy increase, or if the cash value accumulating in the
policy reaches the point, due to these kinds of fees and
expenses, where it no longer is sufficient to cover these
cost, then the policy goes into remission and the insured
either raises the premium to keep the policy in force or the
policy is cancelled.
Variable Life Insurance
Variable life insurance is another form of whole life
insurance and is similar to how Universal life insurance
works. The difference between these two policies is that the
cash values in a Variable life insurance policy are not held
in any kind of money market or holding fund as they are in
Universal life insurance policies, but instead can be
invested in stocks or other mutual fund types of accounts
that are offered by the insurance company. Although the
potential exists for the cash value to increase at a much
faster rate of return, the possibility also exists for the
policy to cancel itself sooner due to unforeseen or volatile
market conditions associated with the stock market. If the
amount of cash value within the policy is insufficient to
pay the actuarial cost of the
insurance benefit and the other fees associated with the
policy then the insured will have to pay the difference in
the form of higher premium dollars or risk the policy
terminating.
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