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Definitions
- P
Paid-up
Insurance
Insurance
on which all required premiums have been paid. The term is frequently
used to mean the reduced paid-up insurance available as a non-forfeiture
option.
Paramedical
Examination
Physical examination of an applicant by a trained person
other than a physician.
Participating
Insurance
Insurance issued by an insurance company providing
participation in dividend distribution.
Participating
Policy
A life insurance policy under which the company agrees
to distribute to policy holders the part of its surplus which
its Board of Directors determines is not needed at the end of
the business year. Such a distribution serves to reduce the premium
the policy holder had paid. See also: Policy dividend; Nonparticipating
policy.
Payor
The person making premium payments on a policy.
Pegging
Pegging is a practical smoothing device used to arbitrarily
increase the actual dividend (s) paid on a new lower dividend
scale to eliminate a temporary reduction in the actual dividends
paid from year to year on a policy. Usually only base policy dividends
are pegged; dividends on riders and Paid Up Additions (PUA) are
not. See: Substitution. Pegging compares (normally before any
adjustments for loans) the following: (a) The smaller of the dividend
amount actually paid in the prior policy year and the prior year's
dividend schedule payable in the current policy year, and (b)
The current policy year's formula payment under the current year's
schedule. This distribution does not follow the contribution method.
It's done infrequently to enhance persistency.
Peril
The cause of a loss insured against in a policy.
Permanent
Life Insurance
Type of life insurance other than term insurance which
accrues cash value and is designed for long-term, or permanent,
needs of a policy holder. Includes universal and variable life,
among others.
Persistency
The degree to which policies stay in force through
the continued payment of renewal premiums.
Persistency
Bonus (Policy Owner's)
An enhancement to the policy's benefits, usually in
the form of additional interest credits and/or reduced charges,
for policies that remain in force for a certain period. The bonus
may or may not be guaranteed in the contract.
Personal
Representative
A person appointed through the will of a deceased or
by a court to settle the estate of one who dies.
Policy
The legal document issued by the company to the policy
holder, which outlines the conditions and terms of the insurance;
also called the policy contract or the contract.
Policy
Dividend
A refund of part of the premium on a participating
life insurance policy reflecting the difference between the premium
charged and actual experience.
Policy
Fee
Fee added to the periodic premium payments to cover
undefined policy costs.
Policy
limit
The maximum amount a policy will pay, either overall
or under a particular coverage.
Policy
Loan: A non-recourse loan from the insurer to the policyowner
secured by the policy's cash value.
Policy
Owner
The individual who owns an insurance policy and who
has all contractual rights. The policyowner is not necessarily
the same person as the insured or the payor.
Policy
Reserves
The measure of the funds that a life insurance company
holds specifically for fulfillment of its policy obligations.
Reserves are required by law to be so calculated that, together
with future premium payments and anticipated interest earnings,
they will enable the company to pay all future claims.
Policy
Term
That period for which an insurance policy provides
coverage.
Policy
Holder
The person who owns a life insurance policy. This is
usually the insured person, but it may also be a relative of the
insured, a partnership or a corporation.
Policy
Holders' Surplus
Sum left after liabilities are deducted from assets.
Sums such as paid-in capital and special voluntary reserves are
also included in this term. This surplus is an additional financial
protection to policy holders in the event a company suffers unexpected
or catastrophic losses. The financial base that permits a company
to sell insurance.
Pool
A method of distributing insurance risk, whereby, the
individual participants share overall risk with the other participants.
Pooling
arrangement
An agreement to divide any losses that might occur
equally among two or more people, typically with each paying the
average loss.
Preexisting
Condition
A physical and/or mental condition of an insured which
first manifested itself prior to the issuance of his/her policy
or which existed prior to issuance and for which treatment was
received.
Preferred
and Preferred Plus
The best premium rate classes for unimpaired, non-smoking
applicants that are in better than average health.
Premium
The amount paid to an insurer or reinsurer in consideration
of his acceptance of a risk.
Premium
Discount
Periodic Payment discount given by a company.
Premium
financing
A policy holder contracts with a lender to pay the
insurance premium on his/her behalf. The policy holder agrees
to repay the lender for the cost of the premium, plus interest
and fees.
Premium
Loan
A policy loan made for the purpose of paying premiums.
Present
Value
Refers to a method that applies an assumed rate of interest
to compute today's value for a future payment.
Premium
Tax
A tax, imposed by each state, on the premium income
of insurers doing business in the state.
Pricing
Elements
The elements used in pricing a policy, principally
investment earnings, mortality and expenses. If actual experience
is better than the assumptions made in determining the policy
guarantees, the difference after reflecting surplus needs is available
for distribution to policy holders through the company's dividend
scale or other non-guaranteed pricing structure.
Primary
Beneficiary: The person who, upon the insured's death, has
the first right to receive insurance proceeds.
Primary
Insurance
Insurance that pays compensation for a loss ahead of
any other insurance coverages the policy holder may have.
Principal
One for whom an agent acts, especially as to contractual
dealings with third persons.
Principal
Sum
The amount payable in one sum in the event of accidental
death and in, some cases, accidental dismemberment. When a contract
provides benefits for both accidental death and accidental dismemberment,
each dismemberment benefit is an amount equal to the principal
sum or some fraction thereof.
Privacy
(1) The right to be let alone; (2) in insurance contexts,
the right to fair personal information practices. Probate:
The court-supervised process of validating or establishing a distribution
for assets of a deceased including the payment of outstanding
obligations.
Proceeds
The amount payable under the terms of a life insurance policy
upon the insured's death or upon the maturity of an endowment.
Producer
A term applied to an agent, solicitor or other person who
sells insurance.
Projected
Rates
Policy payment that is currently being charged by the
company after the guarantee period.
Profit
Commission
A commission payable on the profit generated under
an insurance or reinsurance contract as an encouragement to maintain
the flow of profitable business.
Proportional
reinsurance
A type of reinsurance where the ceding insurer cedes
to its reinsurer a predetermined proportion of the liability and
premium of those policies subject to the reinsurance agreement.
Proposed
Insured
The person named in a life insurance application as the
person whose life is to be covered by the insurance, if the application
is approved.
Prospectus
A form which is often part of the proposal form, giving
details of the cover available with particulars of extra benefits
and rebates.
Provision
A statement or clause, found in an insurance policy,
to establish some term of the contract.
Proximate
cause
The active efficient cause which sets in motion a chain
of events which brings about a result without the intervention
of any new cause working actively from a fresh or independent
source. Proximate cause is not necessarily the closest in time
to the result.
Some whole life
policies let you pay premiums for a shorter period such as 20
years, or until age 65. Premiums for these policies are higher
since the premium payments are made during a shorter period.
Quick Life
Insurance Terms Glossary
(some definitions
taken from the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners' Life Insurance Buyers
Guide)
LIFE
IS COMPLICATED....
BUT TERM LIFE INSURANCE DOES NOT HAVE TO BE.
Privacy
Statement | Legal Statement | Licenses
Privacy statement: Your privacy is
important to us. Advantage
Quote Life Insurance will keep all
the information gathered strictly confidential. Your personal
information will not be used for any other purpose or given to
anyone else.
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