Life
insurance – wise investment in personal finance or excessive
caution?
Released on
= August 5, 2005, 2:03 am
Press Release
Author = Rachel Lane
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = As the number of bankruptcies and home repossessions continue
to rise in the UK, why are more people rebuffing life insurance
as a superfluous expense?
Press Release
Body = Life insurance is typically taken out to offer valuable financial
protection for your family in the event of your death, upon which
a
payment is made to your financial beneficiaries, heirs or family
members. The extent of this payment will depend on your insured
sum and earnings. Life insurance and life assurance may be interlinked
in advertisements, though bear in mind the two
policies are different. Life assurance is a form of financial protection
which is also an investment, as you should always get a pay-out
at the end of the term of the policy. Life insurance on the other
hand is simply financial protection for your family, avoiding the
issue of debt in the event of your death.
According to
an article by the Fair Investment Company, the British life insurance
industry shrank to almost half the size of the pensions industry
last year and according to the Association of British Insurers,
less than 50% of UK households hold a life insurance policy.
In their most
recent newsletter about this issue, the Association of British Insurers
found that 25% of mortgage holders had insufficient life insurance
to cover their debt. The ratio of new life insurance policies to
new mortgage loans was apparently 68% in 1994, but by 2004 this
had dropped by half to 33%.
The absence
of mortgage life coverage poses a serious risk for the dependants
of homeowners. If banks were to embark on wide scale repossessions
as a result of this absence of life insurance, this would impose
a risk on their loan books and reputations. The Association of British
Insurers also state that one of the main reasons behind the increased
gap between mortgage loans and insurance is the
emergence of people remortgaging their property to take advantage
of equity release through a rise in value, without insuring their
borrowing. In their report it was stated that around 63% of new
mortgage loans were remortgages or further advances, compared to
34% in 1994. Egg reported at around the same time, that three out
of four of these new loan homeowners had no intention of insuring
this additional debt.
This is particularly worrying if couples are remortgaging their
property later in life – towards retirement, given that should
anything happen to the breadwinner, the partner would be left with
significant debts without the capability of paying the loan back.
Reasons for
the downward trend in life insurance take-up include:
* Relaxation
in lending policy – increased competition in the mortgage
market means that lenders are not forcing life insurance policies
on their customers
* High house
prices have stretched homebuyers, in particular first time home-buyers,
in terms of their mortgage repayments, that the additional costs
of a
life insurance policy are deemed too expensive
* There are
more households with no dependents
If you’re
interested in researching a life insurance policy, make sure you
shop around. UK websites such as moneynet ( http://www.moneynet.co.uk
) provide life insurance and life assurance information guides,
as well as providing price comparison research for the different
products. In the states, the website
LowerMyBills.com also offers a similar service.
Because of the
various factors listed above, people have also become less familiar
with the term life insurance and without the awareness there is
little recognition of the importance of this type of insurance.
However as speculation increases that
UK households are not coping with their debt, so should the awareness
of life insurance as an essential product in the personal finance
portfolio.
* * * * * *
* * * * * *
Web Site = http://www.cashzilla.co.uk
Contact Details
= About Rachel:
Rachel writes
for the personal finance blog Cashzilla:
http://www.cashzilla.co.uk
Rachel is a
disillusioned, disaffected and broke graduate, exploiting new media
for financial therapy. ;-)
E-mail: rachel@positiveinterest.com
Phone: 0131
561 2251
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