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- Immediate Annuity:
An annuity providing for payment to begin immediately.
- Immediate
Participation Guarantee Plan: (IPG) Type of
pension plan in which all pension contributions are
deposited in an unallocated fund and used directly
to pay benefits to retirees.
- Imputed Negligence:
Case in which responsibility for damage can be transfered
from the negligent party to another person, such as
an employer.
- Incontestability:
Life policies provide that, except for non-payment
of premiums and certain other circumstances, the policy
shall be incontestable after the policy has been in
force for two years during the lifetime of the insured.
- Incontestable
Clause: An optional clause which may be used
in noncancelable or guaranteed renewable health insurance
contracts providing that the insurer may not contest
the validity of the contract after it has been in
force for two (sometimes three) years.
- Incurred Claims:
Incurred claims equal the claims paid during the policy
year plus the claim reserves as of the end of the
policy year, minus the corresponding reserves as of
the beginning of the policy year. The difference between
the year end and beginning of the year claim reserves
is called the increase in reserves and may be added
directly to the paid claims to produce the incurred
claims.
- Incurred-but-not-reported
(IBNR) reserves: liability account on an insurer's
balance sheet reflecting claims that are expected
based upon statistical projections but which have
not yet been reported to the insurer
- Indemnification:
Compensation to the victim of a loss, in whole or
in part, by payment, repair, or replacement.
- Indemnity: Legal principle
that specifies an insured should not collect more
than the actual cash value of a loss but should be
restored to approximately the same financial position
as existed before the loss. Independent
Adjustor: Claims adjustor who offers his or
her services to insurance companies and is compensated
by a fee.
- Independent Agent:
an independent business person who usually represents
two or more insurance companies in a sales and service
capacity and who is paid on a commission basis.
- Independent
Agency System: Type of property and liability
insurance marketing system, sometimes called the American
agency system, in which the agent is an independent
businessperson representing several companies. The
agency owns the expirations or renewal rights to the
business, and the agent is copensated by commissions
that vary by line of insurance.
- Indeterminate
Premium Whole Life Insurance: Nonparticipating
whole life policy that permits the insurer to adjust
premiums based on anticipated future experience. Initial
premiums are guaranteed for a certain preriod. After
the initial guaranteed period expires, the insurer
can increase premiums up to some maximum limit.
- Indexing: Adjusting
of values over time to reflect the impact of inflation.
- Indirect Loss:
See Consequential Loss.
- Individual Contract:
A contract of health insurance made with an individual
called the policy holder or the insured, which normally
covers such individual and, in certain instances,
members of his family.
- Individual Deductible:
Amount that an insured and each person of his or her
family covered by the policy must pay before the group
or individual medical insurance policy begins to pay
for medical expenses.
- Individual Insurance:
Policies which provide protection to the policyholder
and/or his/her family. Sometimes called Personal Insurance
as distinct from group and blanket insurance.
- Individual
Policy Pension Trust: A type of pension plan,
frequently used for small groups, administered by
trustees who are authorized to purchase individual
level premium policies or annuity contracts for each
member of the plan. The polices usually provide both
life insurance and retirement benefits.
- Individual
Retirement Account (IRA): An account
to which an individual can make save for retirement
on a tax-favored basis. Contributions to a standard
IRA are tax deductible for many workers; contributions
to a Roth IRA are made with after-tax dollars but
can be withdrawn tax-free at retirement.
- Industrial
Life Insurance: Life insurance issued in small
amounts, usually less than $1,000, with premiums payable
on a weekly or monthly basis. The premiums are generally
collected at the home by an agent of the company.
Sometimes referred to as debit insurance.
- Industrial
Life Insurance: A class of life insurance
that is usually issued with protection amount of less
than $1,000 and premiums usually payable weekly or
at most, monthly.
- Inflation-Guard
Endorsement: Endorsement added at the insured's
request to a homeowners policy to increase periodically
the face amount of insurance of the dwelling and other
policy coverages by a specified percentage.
- Inherent
vice: a defect or cause of loss arising
out of the nature of the goods in question
- Inheritance tax:
A tax on the right of an heir to receive property
at the death of another.
- Initial
Past Service Liability: The actuarial value
(single sum) of the past service benefits as of the
effective date of the establishment of the plan, or
at the date of the latest liberalization. The maximum
annual past service contribution allowable for tax
deduction is the amount necessary to amortize past
service liabilities and other supplementary pension
or annuity credits over 10 years. Funding of the past
service liability over a period of 30 years (40 in
some cases) is required by the Internal Revenue Service
under ERISA.
- Initial Reserve:
In life insurance, the reserve at the beginning of
any policy year.
- Injury
Independent of All Other Means: An injury
resulting from an accident, provided that the accident
was not caused by an illness.
- Inland Marine
Insurance: A broad form of insurance, generally
covering articles in transit as well as bridges, tunnels
and other means of transportation and communication.
Besides goods in transit (generally excepting trans-ocean),
it includes numerous "floater" policies, such as those
covering personal effects, personal property, jewelry,
furs, fine arts, and other items.
- Inland Marine
Insurance: A broad type of insurance, generally
covering articles that may be transported from one
place to another as well as bridges, tunnels and other
instrumentalities of transportation. It includes goods
in transit (generally excepting trans-ocean) as well
as numerous "floater" polices such as personal effects,
personal property, jewelry, furs, fine art and others.
- Inspection Report:
A report (usually written) of an investigation of
an applicant, conducted by an independent agency that
specializes in insurance investigations. The report
covers such matters as occupation, financial status,
health history, and moral problems.
- Insolvent: Having insufficient
financial resources (assets) to meet financial obligations
(liabilities).
- Insurability: Acceptability
to the company of an applicant for insurance.
- Insurable Risk:
The conditions that make a risk insurable are (a)
the peril insured against must produce a definite
loss not under the control of the insured, (b) there
must be a large number of homogeneous exposures subject
to the same perils, (c) the loss must be calculable
and the cost of insuring it must be economically feasible,
(d) the peril must be unlikely to affect all insureds
simultaneously, and (e) the loss produced by a risk
must be definite and have a potential to be financially
serious.
- Insurance: A system
under which individuals, businesses, and other organizations
or entities, in exchange for payment of a sum of money
(a premium), are guaranteed compensation for losses
resulting from certain perils under specified conditions.
- Insurance: Protection
by written contract against the financial hazards
(in whole or in part) of the happenings of specified
fortuitous events.
- Insurance Company:
An organization chartered to operate as an insurer.
- Insurance Company:
Any corporation primarily engaged in the business
of furnishing insurance protection to the public.
- Insurance Commissioner:
The top insurance regulatory official in a state.
- Insurance Exchange:
Term used to describe a facility that exists in a
few states to provide a market for reinsurance and
for the insurance of large and unusual domistic and
foreign risks that are difficult ot insure in the
normal markets. Examples are the New York Insurance
Exchange, the Insurance Exchange of the Americas,
and the Illinois Inurance Exchange.
- Insurance Examiner:
The representative of a state insurance department
assigned to participate in the official audit and
examination of the affairs of an insurance company.
- Insurance
Guaranty Funds: State Funds that provide for
the payment of unpaid claims of insolvent insurers.
- Insurance
Services Offices (ISO): Major rating organization
in property and liability insurance that drafts policy
forms for personal and commercial lines of insurance
and provides rate data on loss costs for property
and liability insurance lines.
- Insured: A person or
organization covered by an insurance policy, including
the "named insured" and any other parties for whom
protection is provided under the policy terms.
- Insured or
Insured Life: The person on whose life the
policy is issued.
- Insurer: The party to
the insurance contract who promises to pay losses
or benefits. Also, any corporation engaged primarily
in the business of furnishing insurance to the public.
- Insuring Agreement:
That part of an insurance contract that states the
promises of the insurer.
- Insuring Clause:
The clause which sets forth the type of loss being
covered by the policy and the parties to the insurance
contract.
- Integration: A coordination
of pension, disability or other benefit with the other
sources of income, such as Social Security benefit,
through a specific formula designed to ensure reasonable
income replacement.. Qualified plans must integrate
so that total benefits are non-discriminatory between
rank and file employees and owners, officers or highly
compensated employees.
- Inter vivos
Trust: A trust created while the creator of
the trust is living. Also known as a living trust.
- Interest: Money paid
for the use of money.
- Interest-Adjusted
Method: Method of determining cost to an insured
of a life insurance policy that considers the time
cost of money by applying an interest factor to each
element of cost. See Also Net payment cost
index; surrender cost index.
- Interest Option:
Life insurance settlement option in which the principal
is retained by teh insurer and interest is paid periodically.
- Intestate: Without
a will.
- Investment Income:
The income generated by a company's portfolio of investments
(such as in bonds, stocks, or other financial ventures).
- Investment Income:
The portion of a company's income which is derived
from its investments, including interest and dividends
on stocks and bonds.
- Investment
Only Contract: Type of funding instrument
that uses only the investment services of an insurer.
- Involuntary Costs:
insurance company costs incurred as a result of participating
in insurance pools (e.g., workers compensation).
Insurance companies must participate in these pools
as a condition of doing business.
- IPG Plan: See
Immediate Participation Guarantee Plan.
- IRA: See Individual
Retirement Account.
- Irrevocable
Beneficiary: Beneficiary designation allowing
no change to be made in the beneficiary of an insurance
policy without the beneficiary's consent.
- Irrevocable Trust:
A trust in which the creator does not reserve the
right to reacquire the trust property.
- ISO: See Insurance
Services Office.
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