Briefly, the cash value type of life insurance policy involves the payment to the company of substantial overcharges in earlier years, when the true cost of life insurance protection is surprisingly small. During these years the companies can profitably assume the risk for a fraction of the amount charged for cash value type policies, as evidenced by the tremendous difference in premiums for their term plans. These overchanges are collected to pay or partially pay premiums at later ages. Should the policyholder cancel ("surrender") his cash value policy, the company is legally obliged to refund to him a portion of these overcharges. The companies prefer to call these overcharges "cash values" and to cleverly label them as a "savings account" or a "retirement fund". |
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There is only one kind of life insurance, and that is pure protection based on a mortality table. All others are pure protection plus a cash value element that I call 'funny' banking. Venita VanCaspel Author of Money Dynamics |
The deleted chapter, "Side Fund Riders of MPWL Policies", ends with a quotation from the famous "Murphy's Law and Other Reasons Why Things go wRONG!", by Arthur Bloch. Called Gummidge's Law, it says: "The amount of expertise varies in inverse proportion to the number of statements understood by the general public."
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