illness perils
A classification used by health insurance
underwriters to evaluate the type and degree of peril represented by a
particular occupation. Illness perils include exposure to dust, poisons,
and extreme temperatures. See also accident perils.
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immediate annuity
An annuity under which income payments
begin one period after the annuity is purchased.
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immediate participation guarantee (IPG) contract
Similar to a
deposit administration contract except that an IPG contract does not fully
protect the plan sponsor against investment loss, nor does the IPG
contract guarantee minimum investment returns. See also deposit
administration contract.
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impairment
Any aspect of the health, occupation, activities,
or life-style of a proposed insured that could increase his or her
expected mortality or morbidity.
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impairment rider
An attachment to a health insurance policy
that excludes or limits coverage for a specific health impairment. Also
called an exclusion rider or impairment waiver.
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implied authority
The authority that a principal intends an
agent to have and that arises incidentally from an express grant of
authority. See agent and principal. Compare to apparent authority and
express authority.
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incentive coinsurance provisions
Provisions included in some
dental policies that promote regular dental care by specifying that
insurers will pay a higher percentage of dental expenses if the insured
receives regular dental examinations.
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incident of ownership
Any policy right including the right to
(1) change the beneficiary, (2) cancel or surrender the policy, (3) assign
the policy, (4) obtain a policy loan, or (5) use the policy as collateral
for a loan.
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income protection insurance policy
A type of disability
income policy which specifies that an insured is disabled if that person
suffers an income loss caused by a disability.
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income replacement benefit
See recovery benefit.
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income replacement ratio
The percentage of preretirement
income that a retiree would need to receive after retirement in order to
have a postretirement standard of living equivalent to his or her
preretirement standard of living. This ratio is generally less than 100
percent, because some of an individual's expenses (i.e., taxes, commuting
costs, clothing expenditures, savings needs) decrease after retirement.
Also known as the replacement ratio.
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incontestable clause
Life insurance policy clause that
provides a time limit (usually two years) on the insurer's right to
dispute a policy's validity based on material misstatements made in the
application. See also contestable period.
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increasing term insurance
A type of term insurance in which
the death benefit of the policy increases during the term of coverage. The
death benefit may increase at stated intervals by some specified amount or
percentage, or it may increase according to increases in the cost of
living.
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indemnity
See contract of indemnity.
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independent life brokers
Licensed brokers who operate
independently and specialize in selling particular types of products or in
meeting the business coverage or estate planning needs of certain target
markets.
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independent marketing organization (IMO)
A non-company
affiliated organization that contracts with an insurance company to
perform distribution and other marketing functions for one or more of the
company's products or product lines.
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independent property/casualty (P/C) brokers
Independent,
multiple-line agents or agencies that are primarily engaged in the
distribution of property/casualty products and that make up what is
commonly known in the property/casualty insurance industry as the
independent agency system or the American Agency System.
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indeterminate premium life insurance
A type of
nonparticipating whole life insurance that specifies both a maximum
potential premium rate and a lower premium rate. The lower rate is paid by
the policyowner for a specified period (from 1 to 10 years) immediately
after the policy is purchased. Later, the premium rate may fluctuate
according to the investment earnings of the insurance company, but the
premium rate will never be larger than the maximum premium rate. Also
called flexible premium life insurance, nonguaranteed premium life
insurance, and variable premium life insurance.
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indexation
In pension planning, the adjustment of
postretirement benefits to compensate for the effects of inflation.
Benefits are generally indexed to increase in accordance with an increase
in the level of a price index such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI). See
also cost-of-living adjustment (COLA).
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indexed life insurance
A whole life plan of insurance that
provides for the death benefit of the policy and, consequently, the
premium rate to increase automatically every year in accordance with any
increase in the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
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individual account plan
A pension plan funded according to a
defined contribution formula. Each participant's benefits are based on the
amount contained in that individual's account. See defined contribution
formula and defined contribution pension plan.
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individual employer groups
A group insurance market segment
composed of single employers providing coverage for employees through a
policy--the master contract--issued to the employer.
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individual fraud
A type of medical insurance fraud committed
by individuals on their medical expense claims in order to obtain benefits
in excess of their medical expenses. Contrast with provider fraud.
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individual funding methods
Pension plan funding methods in
which the amount of contributions necessary to fund a plan is determined
by first separately calculating the contributions for each of the plan's
participants and then adding these amounts to arrive at the total required
contribution for the plan. Contrast with aggregate funding methods.
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individual insurance
Insurance that is issued to an
individual person, as contrasted with group insurance. Also called
ordinary insurance. See also ordinary life insurance.
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individual practice association (IPA)
A means of organizing a
health maintenance organization (HMO) in which the participating
physicians maintain their own separate offices. Such physicians usually
treat both private patients and HMO members. See also group practice model
(GPM).
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individual retirement account (IRA)
In the United States, a
tax-sheltered savings plan that allows some citizens to make pre-tax
contributions to an approved account. The contributions and investment
earnings are taxable as income only when paid out. Investors can establish
IRAs through a number of financial institutions, including insurance
companies. See also Keogh Act and simplified employee pension (SEP).
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industrial insurance
A form of life insurance which today
accounts for a small percentage of the business sold through the home
service distribution system but a considerable percentage of the insurance
in force. It is characterized by (a) death benefits of $2,000 or less, (b)
a weekly, biweekly, or monthly premium payment schedule, (c) the
collection of premiums at the policyowner's residence by an agent, and (d)
minimum underwriting requirements. See also home service distribution
system.
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in-house brokerage agency
A department established by an
exclusive-agent company and staffed by company-employed brokerage sales
people whose primary function is to solicit distribution agreements with
other companies offering products that the exclusive-agent company itself
does not manufacture. The company's agents can then broker business with
those companies through the in-house brokerage agency.
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initial deductible
See deductible.
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initial premium
The first premium payable for an insurance
contract.
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initial reserve
The reserve on a policy at the beginning of
any given policy year. The initial reserve includes the net annual premium
then due.
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inside build-up
See cash value.
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insolvency clause
In the United States, a clause contained in
most reinsurance contracts and required by most states which specifies
that, if the ceding company becomes insolvent, the reinsurer must pay the
ceding company or its liquidator all reinsurance which comes payable,
without reduction, even if the ceding company or its liquidator has failed
to pay all or a portion of any claim.
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inspection receipt
A receipt given to the applicant when the
applicant receives a policy for inspection. This inspection receipt states
that the insurance is not in effect and that there has been no delivery of
the policy in the legal sense.
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inspection report
A report made by a consumer reporting
agency concerning a proposed insured's lifestyle, occupation, and economic
standing. An inspection report is considered an investigative consumer
report, as defined by the Fair Credit Reporting Act. See also
investigative consumer report.
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installation
The term used to include all the activities from
the time a prospect decides to purchase a group insurance policy to the
time the master contract and its individual certificates are issued.
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installment certificate
A certificate issued to the
beneficiary of a life insurance policy that specifies the amount of each
benefit payment and/or the period during which benefit payments will be
made under a settlement option. An installment certificate also specifies
whether a beneficiary is allowed to withdraw all or part of the funds
during the payment period. See also settlement agreement and settlement
options.
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installment refund option
A form of life income option with
refund which specifies that any proceeds remaining after the death of the
beneficiary will be paid in installments to the contingent payee. Contrast
with the cash refund option.
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insurability provision
An insurance provision stipulating
that, for a policy to become effective, the insured must still be
insurable at the time of policy delivery according to the underwriting
rules and practices of the company.
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insurability statement
A questionnaire that an insurer may
ask an applicant to complete when a considerable amount of time has
elapsed between the time the application is received and the time the
policy is actually issued. The purpose of the insurability statement is to
determine if any insurability factors have changed since the original
application was completed. Insurability statements help protect insurers
from post-issue antiselection. See also antiselection.
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insurability type temporary insurance agreement
An agreement
issued in conjunction with a conditional premium receipt that provides
temporary life insurance coverage as of the date specified in the
agreement on the condition that the proposed insured is insurable. See
also conditional premium receipts and temporary insurance agreements.
Compare to approval type temporary insurance agreement.
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insurable interest
A condition in which the person applying
for an insurance policy and the person who is to receive the policy
benefit will suffer an emotional or financial loss if the event insured
against occurs. Without the presence of insurable interest, an insurance
contract is not formed for a lawful purpose and, thus, is void from the
start.
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insurance
A system of protection against loss in which a
number of individuals agree to pay certain sums of money, called premiums,
to create a pool of money which will guarantee that the individuals will
be compensated for losses caused by events such as fire, accident,
illness, or death.
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Insurance Act
In Canada, a general statute that contains most
of the insurance law of a common law province and that regulates the
conduct of insurers and insurance agents within the province.
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insurance agent
A representative of an insurance company who
sells insurance. An insurance agent locates prospective insurance
customers, determines the insurance needs of each customer, and assists
the customer in applying for insurance. Typically, an insurance agent will
deliver the policy when the application is approved, will collect the
initial premium, and will provide customer service to policyowners. Also
called an agent, a field underwriter, or a life underwriter. See also
broker, detached agent, general agent (GA), personal producing general
agent (PPGA), and soliciting agent.
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Insurance Regulatory Information System (IRIS)
In the United
States, an information system developed by the NAIC to help state
regulatory agencies assess the financial stability of individual insurance
companies by means of a series of ratios derived from the companies'
statutory annual statements.
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insurance trust
A common form of trust, created during the
lifetime of the person who creates the trust, that is funded by insurance
policies on the life of the trust's creator or by the proceeds of such
policies.
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insured
(1) In the United States and Quebec, a person whose
life is insured by an insurance policy (for individual life insurance
policies, called the life insured in the rest of Canada). (2) In the
common law provinces of Canada, the owner of an individual life insurance
policy (called the policyowner in the United States and the policyholder
or owner in Quebec). (For the purposes of this glossary, we have used this
term as it is used in the United States and Quebec, except in the
definitions of purely Canadian terms, in which cases we have made it clear
that we are using the term as it is used in Canada.)
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insured funding
A method of funding a pension plan in which
the plan sponsor purchases annuity or life insurance contracts on behalf
of each participant. The insurance company guarantees a certain benefit to
each retiree. See also group deferred annuity.
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insurer
The party in an insurance contract that promises to
pay a benefit if a specified loss occurs. Usually an insurance company.
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insurer-administered group insurance plan
A group insurance
plan for which the insurer performs the administrative work. This
administrative work includes computing the amounts of the premiums due and
mailing premium notices to the policyholder, usually monthly.
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integrated deductible
A type of deductible included in some
major medical expense plans that can be satisfied by amounts paid by the
insured under basic medical expense plans. Contrast with corridor
deductible.
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integrated dental plan
A dental plan which is part of a major
medical policy.
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integrated pension plan
A private pension plan in which the
benefits or contributions are coordinated with the benefits or
contributions of a government-sponsored pension plan.
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interest-adjusted cost
One figure calculated under the
interest-adjusted net cost (IANC) method of comparing the costs of life
insurance policies. The interest-adjusted cost represents the average
annual cost of a policy and is calculated using premiums, dividends, and
cash values. Also called the surrender cost index (SCI).
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interest-adjusted net cost (IANC) method
A method of
comparing the costs of life insurance policies. The IANC method weights
dividends and cash values according to how far into the future the various
amounts are payable. Under this method, three amounts are calculated: the
interest-adjusted cost, the interest-adjusted payment, and the equivalent
level annual dividend. Also known as the surrender cost index (SCI)
method. See also cost comparison methods.
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interest-adjusted payment
One figure calculated under the
interest-adjusted net cost method of comparing the costs of life insurance
policies. The interest-adjusted payment represents the average annual
payment for the policy and is calculated using only premiums and
dividends. Also called the net payment cost index.
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interest option
A life insurance settlement option under
which the proceeds of a policy are temporarily left on deposit with the
insurer and the money earned on those proceeds is paid annually,
semiannually, quarterly, or monthly to the beneficiary or other payee.
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interest-sensitive insurance
See investment-sensitive
insurance.
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interest-sensitive whole life insurance
See current assumption whole life
insurance.
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internal replacement
The surrender of one life insurance
policy in order to buy another insurance policy that is issued by the same
insurer.
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interpleader
A method for settling a claim under which the
insurer pays the policy proceeds to a court, stating that the company
cannot determine the correct party to whom the proceeds should be paid,
and asks the court to decide the proper recipient.
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investigative consumer report
As defined by the Fair Credit
Reporting Act, a consumer report that uses interviews with persons who are
associated with, or who have knowledge of, the consumer in question in
order to solicit information regarding the consumer's character, mode of
living, or general reputation. See also inspection report.
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investment-sensitive insurance
A general category of
insurance products in which the death benefit and the cash value vary
according to the insurer's investment earnings. In investment-sensitive
insurance products, policyowners share a portion of the insurer's
investment risk. The exact benefit amounts for these policies cannot be
computed in advance, beyond any guaranteed minimums. The specific products
that make up this category of insurance include variable annuities,
variable life insurance, and variable universal life insurance. Also
called interest-sensitive insurance.
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investment year method (IYM)
An accounting method in which an
insurer keeps records of the interest rates it earns annually on funds
assigned each year to accounts within the general account. Also called the
new money method. Compare to the portfolio method.
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involuntary plan termination
The curtailment of a pension
plan initiated by a government organization, such as the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) in the United States, rather than by the plan
sponsor. Contrast with voluntary plan termination. See also distress
termination and standard plan termination.
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IPA
See individual practice association (IPA).
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IRA
See individual retirement account (IRA).
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irrevocable beneficiary
A beneficiary whose rights to the
proceeds of a life insurance policy cannot be cancelled by the policyowner
unless the beneficiary consents. See also beneficiary.
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issuing bank
A mutual savings bank that sells and issues life
insurance policies in its own name. Each issuing bank issues its own
contracts, keeps its own records, and invests the assets of its own
insurance department. See also agency bank and savings bank life insurance
(SBLI).