All of us need life insurance; it’s one of the priority investments to make. Life insurance protects the income generator, and only when income generation is secured can one build wealth.
But don’t make the cardinal mistake that, millions of investors commit – confusing life insurance with wealth-building investment.
Keep the two separate. Buy the maximum insurance that you need at the cheapest rates by selecting only term policies. By doing so, you will save big on premium; now add the premium money saved to your wealth-building investment pool.
This way you achieve a double benefit – you can get a higher insurance cover – and have money left over to invest profitably.
It is always better to keep insurance and investments separate. A term insurance plan has no cash payout at the end of the term. This means if the policy holder were to pass away during the term of the policy, his family will get the sum assured.
Take for instance car insurance. You pay the insurance premium, year in year out, to protect yourself against the financial damage an accident can cause. If you are a safe driver and manage not to bang your car during the year, the premium paid is wasted – you don’t get anything out of it.
And you are perfectly happy to have done so, so long as you and your car are safe. Or take medical insurance. Again, premium is paid to defray any costs of medical emergencies or hospitalisation.
However, if you remain fit and fine the premium paid on the medical insurance is lost. But then again, you do not mind this, do you?
Then why should life insurance be any different? But it is. It always has been.
The reason for this is mainly because life insurance premiums come bundled with the pure premium part combined with the part that gets invested on your behalf.
The policy is sold more as an investment avenue where the insurance just comes along. However, know that insurance never comes along for free, it always has to be paid for. In the case of life insurance, the premium is known as mortality premium.
This mortality premium is applicable for all polices, year after year, without any exception, till such time that the life is insured. Even in the case of single premium plans, or policies where the premium is payable only for part of thepolicy term, the mortality premium keeps getting deducted every year from the fund value. Thus, insurance never just comes along for free, you actually buy it year after year.
Let us take an example to understand this concept in depth. Take the case of a 30 year old person who desires to buy an insurance cover of Rs 10 lakh. Were he to buy an endowment plan, the annual premium that he would pay is around Rs 39,000.
However, a term plan would just cost Rs 3,800 per annum for the same amount of risk cover of Rs 10 lakh. In other words, should the insured person expire prematurely, his legatees will get Rs 10 lakh if he was covered by an Endowmentor a Term policy. Endowment premium is Rs 39,000 and that of term is Rs 3,800.
Agreed, the Endowment (or any other policy) would give a little more to either the legatee or the insured person if he survives the term, but the returns are very poor.
Of course and understandably the agents earn a far greater commission if they sell you polices other than term cover.
And the logical sounding argument given against buying a term cover is – why opt for it when you do not get anything back in the end? But now hopefully you know better.
One can always look at an option of ‘Buy term and invest the difference’.
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