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JANUARY
2007 :: CONSUMER ED
In
Case of Emergency
Insurance Can Keep a Bad Day From
Getting Worse
Insurance gets
no respect.
While just about
every other aspect of personal finance centers on accumulating wealth,
insurance is all about spending money for a product that, if you
need it, you know you've had a bad day. You've either been robbed,
you've wrecked your car, your house has been damaged in a disaster,
you've seriously injured yourself, you have an illness that has
flared up, or, in the worst of all possible bad days, you have died.
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Adapted
from "The Wall Street Journal Complete Personal Finance
Guidebook," by Jeff D. Opdyke. Copyright 2006 by Dow Jones
& Co. Published by Three Rivers Press, an imprint of the
Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House.
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For that reason,
people typically hate shelling out for an insurance policy, often
grumbling about spending money year in and year out for something
they rarely, maybe even never, use.
That's understandable.
But how often do you call on the police department because of an
emergency? How often do you call on the fire department to save
your burning home? You may not need either for decades, but when
you do, you're relieved they're around.
Insurance is
exactly the same. Without it, all the personal wealth you manage
to amass is at risk when bad things happen to you or your property,
or to others injured by you or your property. In those situations,
all the money you've paid to own insurance through the years-the
premiums-pays off, allowing you to replace your property, pay for
expensive medical care, or cover the damages you inflicted on someone
else.
Protecting
One Another
All insurance
is fairly similar in the way it works. When you buy an insurance
policy, the insurer groups you with people similar to you in age,
health status, sex, lifestyle, home location, and a variety of other
factors. Then actuaries-vital statisticians who compute risk-calculate
how many deaths, car accidents, heart transplants, hurricanes or
whatever are likely to occur over a period of time to your particular
group of people.
Insurers use
that risk assessment to determine the premiums you must pay to insure
whatever risk it is you're trying to protect against-whether it's
your premature death or the risk that an uninsured motorist will
total your car. With life insurance, for instance, if you're young
and healthy, your premiums are low because, statistically, the chances
are low that you will die soon and force the insurer to pay a benefit.
On the other hand, if you're old and ailing, your premiums will
be very high because the risk that you will die soon is substantially
greater.
This pool of
similar consumers essentially shares the risk of protecting one
another from financial hardship in the event of death or some other
insured event. This shared risk works because of the law of large
numbers, a scientific principle which holds that the actions of
one will not have a tremendous effect on the group as a whole at
any given moment. Thus, a relatively small number of events each
year that require an insurer to pay claims will not hurt the overall
pool much.
Insurance companies
don't just sit on the premiums you pay; they invest them. Since
statistically you're not likely to claim the money for years, if
ever, the insurer can generate an investment return on those dollars
to increase the asset base available to pay claims with. Because
of the investment return, and because only a small portion of the
insured population will file a claim in any given year, insurers
have the ability to pay your claim for, say, $40,000 even though
you might have paid the insurance company only $7,000 in premiums
through the years.
Three
Main Figures
For the insurance
carrier, there are hundreds of statistics that are taken into account
in setting rates and assigning policyholders to risk pools. From
the point of view of you, the average insurance buyer, there are
just three key figures to keep track of: coverage, premium, and
deductible.
Coverage
is how much money the policy will pay out for whatever event you
are insuring, whether it's your life or the cost of rebuilding a
beachfront home after a hurricane blows through. With life insurance,
for instance, the coverage might be $100,000, meaning that when
you die your beneficiary will receive a check for that amount.
Premium
represents the cost of the coverage, or how much you have to pay
to own the insurance policy. Though the coverage might be $100,000,
your premium will be just a sliver of that because of the way insurance
companies spread your individual risk across millions of customers.
Insurance companies place people in one of four risk groups: preferred,
standard, substandard and uninsurable. Preferred customers are charged
the lowest premiums; the uninsurable are, well, uninsurable for
whatever reason.
But remember
this: A customer whom one insurer labels "preferred" might
be labeled standard by another insurer, which would adjust the customer's
rates accordingly. Insurers routinely tighten and loosen their underwriting
standards-the standards they use to determine who falls into what
category-depending on a variety of business factors. Those standards
can and do change regularly. The message is to shop around to find
a less-expensive premium for the same coverage.
Deductible
is how much money you have to come up with to help cover the cost
of an insurable event. If you have a $250 deductible on your auto
insurance and you wreck your car, causing $1,000 in damages to the
car, you're responsible for the first $250; the insurance company
covers the rest.
Many consumers
often want the lowest deductible because they loathe the notion
of digging up a big chunk of money in the event something happens
that causes them to file a claim. It is better, they feel, to pay
as small an amount as possible and let the insurer do the heavy
lifting.
That is a more
expensive proposition in the long run. Here's why: If you double
a $500 deductible to $1,000, you might save $150 a year on your
premiums. Sure, you're on the hook now for an extra $500, but you'll
come out ahead financially because every 3.3 years you will have
saved $500 in premiums (500 ÷ 150 = 3.3) you'd otherwise
have to pay with a lower deductible.
That makes it
a pretty simple equation: If you're not filing claims very often,
why pay the higher premiums for no reason? And if you are filing
claims often, then it's a moot point: Your insurance company is
going to jack up your premiums anyway or cancel your coverage because
you obviously present a greater risk to the company.
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