Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Term Insurance Ka Jawaab Nahin :

Term Insurance policy is one of the most misunderstood products in India. And it is little surprise that ‘Insurance’ itself is not understood or appreciated enough in India.
                                  
Term insuranceTo begin with, let’s restrict ourselves to term insurance for the moment. For a typical investor buying an insurance policy primarily for the sake of tax benefit, the term policy appears to be an anathema. This is because the basic characteristic of a term policy is that you pay premiums in return for a benefit to your family in case you die and nothing for you if you survive.


                                                                
And hence the most common question is, why should I pay annually for a product if I am not going to get anything back?
                                       
Very few understand that a term policy is insurance at its purest and simplest. You pay premiums because there is a guarantee that if something happens to you, your family will be paid out the pre-decided amount, hence you have the peace of mind that even if you are not there, those loved ones you leave behind will not have to bear a financial loss as well.
                                              
Term insurance is protection against risk to life.
                                           
Value for Money?
Since there is no value of your financial investment or savings element involved, the premium accounts only for the risk cover costs (mortality costs) and hence is very low compared to other insurance products. No other insurance policy will offer you as much value for money as this.
                                               
Let’s say you bought a pure term insurance plan for Rs 20 lakhs for 20 years. If you die within that period, your family receives the sum assured of Rs 20 lakhs, which will help meet their needs and goals. However, if you outlive the 20 year period, you get nothing on maturity of the term. Pure term plans do not accumulate cash value, and hence do not have any maturity benefits.
                                                   
Why should I take this plan?
The answer - it provides a safety net for your family and is the cheapest form of insurance available. The premium depends on the mortality charges, which are lower at a younger age. Hence, the earlier in life you take insurance, the longer the term and cheaper the cost.
                          
Term insurance policies cover you for a specific amount of money and for a specific period of time. How do you then decide what is the right amount and right term for you?
                                         
The amount depends on a number of factors like the age of your children, the important goals that you have, the number of years left to your retirement and so on. Likewise the term of the policy is mostly linked to how long you are going to be working.
                                           
Basically, term policy is a replacement of income, hence as long as you are going to generate this income, the term of the policy should be that long – unless you build up enough assets that your family doesn’t need to depend on insurance or all your major commitments are fulfilled and it would not matter if you stopped work.
                                               
The amount of the policy or the risk cover, as it is referred to, can be calculated by using two methods – thehuman life value approach and expense protection approach.
                                             
The Human Life Value approach determines what your economic contribution would be over your expected working life. It is the expected life time earnings of an individual expressed in present rupee terms. A rupee today is worth more than a rupee tomorrow and therefore it has to be discounted by an assumed rate to arrive at its present value. This calculates your economic worth today and the amount for which you should be insured.
                                                         
Say you’re 30 years old, earning an income of Rs 12 lakhs per annum currently and expected to retire at the age of 60. Assuming an average growth of 2% per annum on your income and a return of 8% on your investments, your economic value today is Rs 1.8 crores.
                                                           
The Expense protection approach, on the other hand, addresses the issues pertaining to liabilities, protection of future goals and family expenses. 
                                                          
If you are an earning member of your family and there are others dependent on your income, you need to protect them and their interests even if you're not around. Income is supplemented by the returns expected to be earned from an invested corpus. The shortfall in this corpus is the Expense protection that needs to be taken care of.
                                                                      
There are different kinds of Term Insurance Plans available in the market today such as Single Premium Term Assurance, Loan Cover Term Assurance and Term Insurance With Return of Premium. In the Single premiumvariant, the premium for the life cover for the full term of the plan is collected in the first year itself, whilst in the Loan Cover Term variant the Sum Assured reduces in sync with the reducing loan amount, annually, clubbed with a limited level premium paying mode. Most home loans are covered by this variant. The Term Insurance With Return of Premium (ROP) Plan works the same way as a pure insurance policy. The only difference is that on maturity, the insurance company returns to the customer all the premiums that he has paid to secure his cover.
                                                                   
The death benefit from a term plan is tax free under Section 10(10D) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Premiums paid towards the plan can be claimed as a deduction under Section 80C of the IT Act.
                                                       
It is unfortunate that most Indians buy insurance, some even the term plan mainly to avoid tax rather than to seek cover against risk. We hope that after reading this, you will look upon to term insurance as a cheap and sound investment offering tremendous peace of mind and security to your loved ones.
                                                                                                                                                     ~
~
Source : InvestmentYogi

No comments:

Popular Posts