Viatication

  

Categories: Insurance

During Marnie’s last consult with the Grim Reaper, she was surprised to see that he’d brought along a squat little man in a tweed suit. “This is my insurance and tax guy, Sam,” the Grim Reaper said. As it turns out, now that Marnie’s been diagnosed with a terminal illness and death is pretty much imminent (hence the meet-ups with ol’ Reapmeister), there are rules about what she can and can’t do with her possessions before she dies. And when it comes to her life insurance policy, Sam tells her, she can’t gift it to her beneficiaries in an effort to prevent them from having to pay estate taxes.

But there is something she can do with that life insurance policy, and it’s called viatication. “Viatication” is the process of buying life insurance policies from terminally ill folks, and it’s done by firms that are state-licensed to do these sorts of things. The sick person receives most of their policy money now, and in return, the firm continues to pay the policy premiums, and collects the whole amount once the person dies.

This might be great for Marnie, Sam says, because of two considerations. First, viatication means she has money now to do stuff like pay medical bills or foot the bill for her granddaughter’s college tuition. And second, viatification doesn’t violate the three-year rule on dying people transferring assets to people to avoid estate taxes, so it’s got that going for it, which is nice.

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Finance: What is insurance: deductibles,...12 Views

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and finance Allah shmoop What is insurance Shmoop All right

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people This is you nervous Nellie You're worried about your

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house and well here is your house Your house and

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Lynn carry a book value I eat what you paid

00:15

for it last year of $300,000 You realise that some

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night you may hear it rumbling and it won't be

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from your stomach And you'll come fully awake surfing on

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your chimney at 90 miles an hour down the road

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If this happens you're home will become duck Disneyland And

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well it's 300,000 Dollar value will likely be worth something

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close Teo zero You can stomach paying $10,000 from these

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damages out of your own piggy bank to go find

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a new home But you want someone else to pay

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the $290,000 gap to go buy an equivalent place somewhere

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else with a you know nice view of the valley

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Good thing you bought term real estate insurance That is

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You pay 800 bucks a month What's called a premium

00:54

in return for a Sam Schmucks insurance company being willing

00:57

to pay for a new home for you showed your

00:59

old home B You know damn well that $800 premium

01:02

you pay every month is a bet that the insurance

01:04

company is betting your house will be fine and trust

01:07

us They want your house to be fine because well

01:09

then they can keep collecting your monthly premiums almost 10

01:11

grand a year and sit on their hands In the

01:14

meantime an update their Facebook pages and the economics makes

01:17

sense Sam Schmuck insures 49 other homes just like yours

01:20

collecting 10 grand a year from each for total revenues

01:23

Sam Schmucks of 500,000 bucks a year if they had

01:25

to replace an entire home at a cost of 290,000

01:29

every year Well Sam schmuck is still profiting handsomely from

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the engagement You're on the other end of the bed

01:34

Your bed in your house will not be fine Otherwise

01:37

you probably would not have gotten the insurance in the

01:39

first place You wanted to have that safety net for

01:42

your worry Well this is the stuff of insurance reducing

01:45

risk by entering a contract where one party agrees to

01:48

compensate another party in the case of specific damage or

01:51

losses in exchange for premium payments Yeah that's insurance You

01:55

pay the insurance company premiums every month and they pay

01:57

you well when you need it If you're home isn't

02:00

washed away this month well then you lose all 800

02:03

bucks premium that you've paid And Sam Schmucks Insurance Company

02:06

keeps it so you can do the math if 10

02:08

years go by and your house still hasn't been washed

02:11

away While Sam Schmuck has collected 10 years of a

02:13

10 grand per year from you and since that money

02:16

is reinvested in bonds and stocks and other investments while

02:20

Sam Schmucks earnings are compounding that is Sam's rolling in

02:24

all that premium payment money and the interest he's earning

02:26

on it invested collectively after 10 years Well if it

02:30

follows a roughly with the markets do thereabouts it'll double

02:33

or more to clarify That is 10 years of 10

02:36

grand and payments is only 100 grand Yet your home

02:38

has financial exposure to Sam Schmuck of 290 grand So

02:42

how is it that 10 years of payments totaling 100

02:44

grand can be worth 290 Well when Sam receives your

02:48

money he invested in some form of the stock and

02:50

or bond market and that money then earns a financial

02:53

return such that it grows at a nice clip And

02:55

he's presuming that your home will last at least 10

02:58

years before it gets Ah washed away to the sea

03:00

And remember he has dozens of homes He's ensuring and

03:02

all those will likely not get washed away Right So

03:05

yes we're guessing on the numbers But it's pretty reasonable

03:07

to think about numbers doubling in and changing or so

03:10

like that in every decade and change But what if

03:12

your house did wash away well After all it's in

03:15

an obviously precarious position and you just couldn't say no

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to the view Could you worth the risk You told

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yourself if you woke up one day to beavers as

03:22

your new neighbors Well you'd be looking to Sam Schmuck

03:25

to pay acclaim and get that insurance dough to go

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buy another home But First Mister Schmuck reminds you that

03:30

you must pay the $10,000 deductible deductible is the dough

03:34

you pay first before the insurance company's money kicks in

03:37

Well this means that in a calamity you must pay

03:39

for the 1st 10,000 bucks before you see any dollars

03:42

from Sam Schmucks Insurance Company Sam Schmucks Insurance Company and

03:45

deals and all kinds of shmoop O R Insurance You've

03:48

got health insurance betting on your health continuing its life

03:51

insurance betting on you living another month car insurance button

03:54

on your car's life homeowner's insurance betting on your home's

03:57

life like that property insurance betting on your possessions and

04:00

someone when the risk makes you feel uncomfortable enough while

04:03

so much so that you're willing to pay to reduce

04:05

that risk Well somewhere out there and insurance agents Spidey

04:08

senses become engaged and they'll find you Well okay maybe

04:12

I'll type it into Google first Then they'll find you

04:14

Insurance companies stay afloat because while they're working with a

04:16

lot of data to help them make smart bets remember

04:20

every insurance policy is filled with tons of fine print

04:23

Like if you break your pinky toe it's totally covered

04:25

But the tone next to your pinky toe well that

04:27

one's eso Well insurance companies take all of that data

04:30

and crunch the numbers to make policies that are attractive

04:32

enough to get people to buy them But our waited

04:34

enough toward the insurance company is that it's worth it

04:37

for them to take that risk Ideally they'll make few

04:39

payouts and keep the premium payments rolling in But don't

04:42

worry Even insurance companies have insurance like usually other insurance

04:46

companies in a magical dance of risk sharing called reinsurance

04:50

That's why the insurance market doesn't crack into bits when

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an entire city pulls in Atlantis and goes underwater Now

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put your poker face on or some snorkel gear and

04:58

ask yourself What's worth the risk Is it worth it

05:01

to go skydiving without health insurance Is it worth the

05:04

risk to own a house next to a forest without

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fire insurance What's worth those monthly premium payments that go

05:10

down You're draining into Sam schmucks pockets Yeah well only 00:05:13.449 --> [endTime] you can say good luck

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