Guaranteed vs. Non-Guaranteed Permanent Life Insurance Policies
7:06 PMFifty years ago, most life insurance policies sold were guaranteed and
offered by mutual fund companies. Choices were limited to term,
endowment or whole life policies. It was simple, you paid a high, set
premium and the insurance company guaranteed the death benefit. All of
that changed in the 1980s. Interest rates soared, and policy owners
surrendered their coverage to invest the cash value in higher interest
paying non-insurance products. To compete, insurers began offering
interest-sensitive non-guaranteed policies.
Today, companies
offer a broad range of guaranteed and non-guaranteed life insurance
policies. A guaranteed policy is one in which the insurer assumes all
the risk and contractually guarantees the death benefit in exchange for a
set premium payment. If investments underperform or expenses go up, the
insurer has to absorb the loss. With a non-guaranteed policy the owner,
in exchange for a lower premium and possibly better return, is assuming
much of the investment risk as well as giving the insurer the right to
increase policy fees.
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