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Life insurance includes all insurance
that relates to an inevitable event, in the sense that the
event must occur at some time. Life insurance is mainly related to a person’s death or in the
case of a pension plan, the date on which he or she reaches a certain age and retires (Longman
Dictionary of Business English, 1989). Life insurance consists of a plan for distribution of
funds under which the larger group of individuals can balance the burden of loss from death for
the insurance beneficiaries. There are a number of different types of life insurance contracts,
such as
term life for a specific period and
whole life contracts that run throughout the whole of
the insured person’s life. Life insurance may also be classified according to type of customer,
where the major types are ordinary, group, and credit. Ordinary insurance concerns individuals
paying an annual premium. The group insurance market consists mainly of employers covering
their employees by group contracts.
Credit life insurance is sold to individuals as part of a
purchase contract where the seller is protected for the balance of the unpaid debt should the
insured die before completion of the contract.
Health insurance, within the private sector, is
usually financed on a group basis, with the money going into a special fund in order to cover
hospital costs, disability, and other major medical expenses, often subsidised by the
government and sponsored by the employer. In insurance policies, life and health insurance are
often treated together. (Encyclopaedia Britannica, Macropaedia, 1987)
Another type of insurance, representing a growing business as a result of deregulation,
is the
unit link. Unit link insurance is life insurance where the policyholder has the possibility of
influencing the savings part. The customer pays premiums that accumulate in the form of
shares in a mutual fund, which he or she may alter if
the revenue is not at a satisfactory level.
(Bergendahl, Hartman & Lindblom, 1990) This form of saving that includes insurance services
(or the other way around), is increasingly prevalent and is a trend related to the presently
decreasing rates of interest of ordinary bank accounts.
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