Life insurance should be your first personal finance priority

Home Forums Finance & Money matters-Investing, Retirement Planning Life insurance should be your first personal finance priority

Welcome Dear Guest

To create a new topic please register on the forums. For help contact : discussdentistry@hotmail.com

Currently, there are 0 users and 1 guest visiting this topic.
Viewing 1 post (of 1 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #13111
    ark_advisor
    Offline
    Registered On: 13/09/2015
    Topics: 115
    Replies: 5
    Has thanked: 0 times
    Been thanked: 2 times

    Life insurance should be your first personal finance priority

    How to decide your insurance needs

    Decide how much money your family will need if you die suddenly. Don’t just guess or pull a number out of thin air, actually sit and do some posthumous financial planning. A good rule of thumb is ten years’ income but there could be other factors influencing it. Some of these factors could be whether you own a house or other property; what kind of income your spouse or other family members have and how many children you have.

    Let’s look at this in detail. The only reasonable way of making this decision is to unemotionally create a financial plan that your family should follow if you die suddenly. Families also have to consider the impact of both parents passing away in an accident. The impact of such a tragedy could be greater than just the sum of two deaths occurring separately. Here are some heads to consider.

    Time left to retirement: Before buying any term insurance plan, an individual must assess time left to retire and a sufficient sum assured. Time remaining to retire here does not necessarily mean retirement from your job, it means the time period till your family members will depend on you for their financial needs. Once you know the number of years for which you have to stand as the financial support, look out for policies that offer the matching policy term and maturity age. For instance if you are supposed to retire after 20 years, make sure that you take a minimum policy term of 20 years. It is fundamentally important to be insured at least till you pass on the baton to another family member.

    Loans and debts: As far as possible, take debtors’ insurance so that your debts can be paid off straightaway. If you have a housing loan, the lender has probably made sure that you already have such insurance for that loan. Other loans need to be considered. While you can add these to your main term insurance, taking a policy where the insurance company will directly pay off lenders has the advantage that your survivors will not be tempted to carry the loans. Do not waste money in insuring unsecured personal debt like that for credit card. The card issuer cannot make your family pay so there’s no need to cover that, unlike say, vehicle loans where you wouldn’t want the family car to be possessed by the lender.

    Future Expenses

    The hardest part of providing for future expenses is estimating and allowing for inflation. Take a reasonable, at least 7 per cent, inflation rate into account.

    Education: Insurance companies are making some attempts at designing policies that will ensure that your children’s education is paid for. What you ideally need is a policy that is conceptually term insurance, that is, which does not have any payout if your children get educated during your lifetime.

    Living Expenses: Estimate what living expenses are going to be and estimate the investment needed to yield that much return. Your term insurance should be for this amount. Make a realistic financial plan and not an idealised one. Perhaps your spouse will need to start working if she doesn’t do so now. Take into account the investment needed if she would start a small business.

    When it comes to ‘how much sum assured’ it is better to avoid thumb rules, as the amount to be called an adequate sum would differ for each individual. The best person to decide on the amount will be the one to be insured. Sum assured should be purely based on current lifestyle, annual family income, annual expenses, current investments (if any) and liabilities like home loan or education loan overhead. The final value after considering these figures will be the Life value of prospective insured. Most insurance companies provide a ‘Human Life Value’ calculator on their website to ease the task of calculations. Do not forget to consider inflation as the purchasing worth of R100 today, will erode with time.

    It is very important to find out an apt cover because, a higher one would make you pay for the protection that was actually not required and buying a lower sum assured may not be able to take care of financial needs of your family in adverse situation. Most insurance products come with a minimum and/ or maximum sum assured under their products. It is important to check if sum assured on offer matches your requirement.

    This kind of unemotional, careful and realistic thinking is really the heart of making a sudden-death financial plan. Don’t shy away from it. The fact is that Indians have a deep-set cultural antipathy against planning for their deaths. A minuscule number of Indians make a will. Even the country’s most successful and richest entrepreneur, who organised everything else about his business so carefully (and whose death was not sudden), died without making a will and left his two sons to fight public battles for their inheritance.

    For more details please call on 8693800025 or email your queries on ark.advisor@gmail.com

     

Viewing 1 post (of 1 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.