(I grew up as an avid reader of Reader's Digest- The source of knowledge and some stimulating stories. I am delighted that the July issue of RD carries an article of mine from Moneylife, with some re-writing and comments from the Editors. )
The Elusive Pure Insurance
By R.
BALAKRISHNAN From Moneylife
68 | july 2014 | reader’s
digest
It has emerged, from the
recent reports and exposés on banks, that insurance is one of the conduits
for money
laundering, along with real estate, precious metals, gems and jewellery. The
insurance industry, as it is structured the world over, is actually an
investment manager more than a risk manager.
My memory
goes back to my early days when uncles and cousins sold me “endowment” policies
on which they made handsome commissions, year on year. And after I stopped
subscribing to their con games, they simply stopped servicing me, secure in the
assurance that as long as I paid my premiums, the commission would go to them.
Those dear ones have stolen some of my wealth.
The
industry has come a long way thereafter. It indulged in another con game in the
2000s, when it sold tens of thousands of crores of unit-linked insurance plans
(ULIPs) that created a big dent in the average person’s savings by inflicting
massive losses on them. All this has led to a slowdown in the insurance
business. The industry has now raised alarm bells that it is not growing, as if
this is a national tragedy.
Well, to
me, it is the first sign of financial wisdom dawning upon investors who have
been shown the ghost at the graveyard and milked of their bank balances that have
gone to enrich the agents. Life insurance is needed for the lowest-income
strata of society—a segment that cannot afford to pay the premiums. The State
could provide a minimum cover of a few lakhs of rupees—at the cost of the
national exchequer. I will not crib about this subsidy. If one takes a pure
insurance product, most of us would need to spend under a thousand rupees a
month, for a reasonable cover. Once you grow rich, you can simply stop paying,
like medical insurance premiums. Insurance companies will try and avoid selling
pure term policies. One can take any kind of “investment” policy for even a
newborn. Now, try asking your agent to issue a “pure” term policy for your
child. The agent will say that the insured has to be at least 18. If the kid
was good enough for an investment insurance policy, why is a term insurance
policy denied?
I will offer a real-life
experience. I went to HDFC Life, through my banking relationship manager, and asked for a “pure”
term policy for my children who are over 18. His face dropped, since
commissions are very low compared to an endowment or a ULIP, but he humoured
me. He collected details from me and said that he would get back the next day.The
following day, he wanted to know about my children’s “income.” I mentioned that
they are students and, as a parent, I would be paying the premiums till they
start earning and continue with the policy, if they want to.
Agents told me that, to take a term
policy, the “insured” has to have “income”! No matter how much I argued, they
would not relent. They even refused to give it to me in writing, admitting that
this was one of the requirements.
I continued arguing with them: What if
someone takes a policy and then loses his job? They simply refused to budge.
However, since then, the HDFC Life guy has made a couple of abortive attempts
to sell ULIPs and SIPs for my children. For ULIP and SIPs, it does not matter
where the money comes from. Next, I went to an LIC agent, who said that he will
get back to me about a pure term policy. A year later, I’m still waiting for
that call.
I tried to buy an
insurance product that is pure risk—no money back if the insured person
survives—which is the only insurance that a person needs apart from medical
insurance. For medical insurance, there is no insistence that the person who
has to be insured has to be a salaried person.
Almost one-fourth of
the total assets of the insurance industry are accounted for by ULIPs. If you
add back the commissions and administrative expenses, the figure would be even higher.
The life insurance industry collects over one lakh crore rupees annually in “first
premium” receipts. Of this, the premiums for term policies are not disclosed
but I suspect they may not be even five percent. With so much mis-selling
(labelling something as insurance and selling investment products qualifies as mis-selling
in my dictionary), I have often wondered whether we would be better off
without this industry.
REPRINTED FROM MONEYLIFE, THE PERSONAL FINANCE
MAGAZINE. © MONEYLIFE / R. BALAKRISHNAN
NOW,
BYPASS THE AGENT! BUY TERM INSURANCE
As a rule, keep your
insurance needs separate from your investment needs. Life insurance must be
taken purely to cover the risk of death: The potential financial loss arising
out a family member’s passing away can be compensated to a great extent if he
or she had taken life insurance.
Most
Indians take life insurance policies that give returns—indeed they are swayed
by those earnings. What they are seldom sold is “Term” insurance, which is pure
insurance with seemingly no benefits during the insured person’s lifetime. But
what you may not realize is the big benefit that term insurance really offers
during your lifetime: very low cost to you in the regular premiums you pay the
insurance company to stay insured. Term insurance will cost you only a fraction
of what you pay for ULIPs or other insurance schemes. So what you save here may
be invested in fixed deposits, or better still, in a good equity mutual fund or
directly in the shares of good companies. This way, you build wealth, without
sharing your hard-earned money with the insurance agent, and cover risk at the
same time.Insurance agents get very little commission when you take term
insurance,whereas they get a huge amount taken from your premium/investment
when you buy ULIPs, for instance. So they are often not interested in selling
you term insurance and will sweet-talk you into the “returns” you get with
other products (schemes) and “mis-sell” only those products that fetch them
good commissions.
We now live in the age of
the internet, when you no longer need to deal directly with agents, brokers,
bankers and the like—if you bought something online. You can now buy term
insurance directly from an insurance company’s website. So the agent’s
disinterest no longer matters.
Reader’s
Digest checked with insurance companies and found out that: You normally need
to be between ages 18 and 55 to be given term insurance. The cover may extend
till 65 or 75, by which time you’re unlikely to have dependents. If you took
term insurance online for a large cover (usually above Rs75 lakh)
and you are 45 or older, you will be asked to undergo a medical examination.
Actually, it is best to undergo a medical exam and declare all existing
illnesses—and family med history—before taking any life (or medical) insurance,
since the insurance industry is notorious for repudiating claims on the
flimsiest of grounds, and these are usually medical grounds. the editors
3 comments:
thanks for the post.
What i would like to add here is that a practice of taking a cut in the realized amount of a term policy is also on the way. The agents or sometimes the employees who will pass your claim ask for a cut in the sum assured which rages from 5-15 %. Now though this is a malpractice some people never hesitate to sacrifice lets say 10 lakh to receive rest 85 lakh. So those commission agents have found a work around in the term policy case too.
Great point. The rot has set in. Corruption at every level.
insurance can always be term the best option for people iat time of fatal incidents. Life insurance is securing your life considering your future plans and inflation in income.
term insurance
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