Is Life Insurance Beneficial?
Life insurance offers two important benefits. The first benefit is that it protects your loved ones against the financial consequences of an unexpected death. The second advantage is that it provides living benefits.
Everyone knows that the financial consequences of death can be overwhelming. When a spouse, parent, child, sibling or grandparent dies, there is a great deal of emotional trauma to deal with by the surviving family members. However, the financial consequences can be even more destructive. If there is no life insurance in place, surviving family members are thrust into a position of extreme financial difficulty. Not only do they have to contend with the loss of future income, but there’s also the death and burial itself. They generate sudden and unexpected expenses.
Mortality statistics show that a significant number of people die, every year, before they reach their normal life expectancy. If the deceased person happens to have been a breadwinner, the consequences of their premature death can be extremely tragic, in many ways. The survivors are not only dealing with personal grief, but they must also find a way to deal with the financial consequences. There are still daily living expenses, even though one income is now missing.
Aside from the cost of the funeral, other expenses survivors must contend with include executor’s fees and estate administration costs. Outstanding debts, like car loans, mortgages, credit cards, medical expenses, promissory notes and death taxes, will fall on the shoulders of the survivors, and must be paid. There are state and federal taxes to consider, as well.
Also, consider the future security of loved ones. Living expenses, mortgage payments, and children to raise and educate, are only a few of the concerns, but in the end, it doesn’t matter what financial obligations are left behind. The bottom line is bills must be paid, and that takes money. If you want to guarantee your family does not suffer through the financial devastation a premature death can generate, then you must make plans now, and ensure they have adequate funds available.
Some survivors may have a time during which it will be difficult to work, and some may have to think about a survivor’s blackout period. This is a time where social security stops paying the surviving spouse, because dependent children are no longer a factor. These events are difficult if no monies are available. Also, some families try to plan for a surviving spouse’s retirement needs. Because of the fact that life insurance can generate an immediate estate, at a time when it is most needed, it is a means of estate building.
Life insurance also supplies living benefits, as some types of permanent policies offer a cash benefit. In addition to the death settlement, they accrue a cash value, and this cash value belongs to the policyholder. Some permanent policies also permit withdrawals from the cash benefit, and these can be used for any reason the policyholder chooses. The policyholder can also take out loans from the insurance company, by using the policy’s cash value as loan collateral.
Susan Reynolds is the content coordinator for a leading South African Insurance Provider who specialises in Life Insurance Policies.

