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- Salvage: Recovery made
by an insurance company by the sale of property which
has been taken over from the insured as a part of loss
settlement.
- Self-
Administered (Trusteed or Directly Invested) Plan:
A plan funded through a fiduciary, generally a bank,
but sometimes a group of individuals, which directly
invests the accumulated funds. Retirement payments are
made from the fund as they fall due.
- Self-Administration:
The procedure where an employer maintains all records
regarding the employees covered under a group insurance
plan.
- Self-Insured Retention:
A form of risk financing through which a firm assumes
all or a part of its own losses.
- Senior Citizen
Policies: Contracts insuring persons 65 years
of age or more. In most cases, these policies supplement
the coverage afforded by the government under the Medicare
program.
- Separate Account: A fund held by a life insurance
company which is separate and apart from its general
assets and is generally used for investment of pension
assets in common stocks.
- Separate Account:
An asset account established by a life insurance company
separate from other funds, used primarily for pension
plans and variable life products. This arrangement permits
wider latitude in the choice of investments, particularly
in equities.
- Service-Type Plans:
Plans that provide their benefits in the form of services
rendered rather than cash (for example, Blue Cross and
Blue Shield).
- Settlement Options:
The several ways, other than immediate payment in cash,
which a policyholder or beneficiary may choose to have
policy benefits paid.
- Severability of interest:
a potential liabilitybetween different entities
named on a single insurance policy
- Short-Term
Disability Income Insurance: The provision to
pay benefits to a covered disabled person as long as
he/she remains disabled up to a specified period not
exceeding two years.
- Sickness Insurance:
A form of health insurance providing benefits for loss
resulting from illness or disease.
- Skip person: a beneficiary
who is at least two generations younger than the person
making the transfer.
- Social Security
Freeze: A long- term disability policy provision
which establishes that the offset from benefits paid
by Social Security will not be changed regardless of
subsequent changes in the Social Security law.
- Social Security
Option: An option under which the employee may
elect that monthly payments of an annuity before a specified
age (62 or 65) be increased, and that payments thereafter
be decreased to produce, as nearly as practical, a level
total annual annuity to the employee, including Social
Security benefits when they become due.
- Soft Market: That part
of the insurance sales cycle in which competition is
at a maximum as insurance companies use their excess
capacity to sell more policies at lower prices (see
"Hard market").
- Special Damages:
Compensation awarded for actual economic losses, such
as medical expenses and lost wages. (See general damages)
- Special Risk Insurance:
Coverage for risks or hazards of a special or unusual
nature.
- Split Funding: The
use of two or more funding agencies for the same pension
plan. An arrangement whereby a portion of the contributions
to the pension plan are paid to a life insurance company
and the remainder of the contributions invested through
a corporate trustee, primarily in equities.
- Spouse's Benefit:
Payments to the surviving spouse of a deceased employee,
usually in the form of a series of payments upon meeting
certain requirements and usually terminating with the
survivor's remarriage or death.
- Standard Insurance:
Insurance written on the basis of regular morbidity
underwriting assumption used by an insurance company
and issued at normal rates.
- Standard Markets: insurance companies for which
the vast majority of people qualify
- Standard Provision:
Those contract provisions generally required by state
statutes until superseded by the uniform policy provision.
- Standard Provisions:
A set of policy provisions prescribed by former laws
setting forth certain rights and obligations of both
the insured and the company under an individual policy
of health insurance. These were originally introduced
in 1912 and have now been replaced by the Uniform Provisions.
- Standard Risk: A
person who, according to a company's underwriting standards,
is entitled to purchase insurance protection without
extra rating or special restrictions.
- State Disability
Plan: A plan for accident and sickness, or disability
insurance required by state legislation of those employers
doing business in that particular state.
- State Fund: A fund set
up by a state government to provide a specific line
or lines of insurance. Some state permit private insurers
to compete with the state fund.
- State Insurance
Department: A department of a state government
whose duty is to regulate the business of insurance
and give the public information on insurance.
- State-of-the-Art
Defense: An argument used in product liability
cases that the technology needed to avoid the loss in
a particular case did not exist at the time of the product's
manufacture
- Statutory Accounting:
Special accounting practices for insurance companies
required by state law and designed to provide greater
protection for the public against potential insolvency
of these essential institutions.
- Statutory
Accounting Principles (SAP): Principles required
by statute which must be followed by an insurance company
when submitting its financial statements to the various
state insurance departments. Such principles differ
from the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).
- Statutory Surplus:
the amount left after a company's liabilities are subtracted
from assets when both those values are computed using
Statutory
Accounting Principles (SAP)
- Statutory
Underwriting Profit or Loss: Premiums earned
less losses and expenses.
- Step-Rate Premium:
A rating structure in which the premiums increase periodically
at pre-determined times such as policy years or attained
ages.
- Step-up in basis:An
increase in the tax basis of property to the value claimed
in the taxable estate of a decedent.
- Stock Company: A
company organized and owned by stockholders, as distinguished
from the mutual form of company which is owned by its
policyholders.
- Stock Exchange:
An organization that provides a facility for buyers
and sellers of listed securities to come together to
make grades in those securities.
- Stockholder
(or shareholder): A person who owns shares of
stock in a corporation.
- Stock Insurance
Company: A company in which the legal ownership
and control is vested in the stockholders.
- Stock Life
Insurance Company: A life insurance company
owned by stockholders who elect a board to direct the
company's management. Stock companies, in general, issue
nonparticipating insurance, but may also issue participating
insurance.
- Stock Redemption
Plan: an entity purchase form of buy-sell agreement
within a corporation that involves the corporation buying
back shares from a departing owner.
- Straight Life Insurance:
Whole life insurance on which premiums are payable
for life.
- Strict Liability:
Liability for damages even though fault or negligence
cannot be proven.
- Subrogation: Process
by which one insurance company seeks reimbursement from
another company or person for a claim it has already
paid.
- Substandard
(Impaired Risk): A risk that cannot meet the
normal health requirements of a standard health insurance
policy. Protection is provided in consideration of a
waiver, a special policy form, or a higher premium charge.
Substandard risks may include those persons who engage
in certain sports and persons who are rated because
of poor habits or morals.
- Substandard Insurance:
Insurance issued with an extra premium or special restriction
to those persons who do not qualify for insurance at
standard rates.
- Substandard Risk:
An individual, who, because of health history or physical
limitations, does not measure up to the qualification
of a standard risk.
- Supplementary Contract:
An agreement between a life insurance company and a
policyholder or beneficiary by which the company retains
the cash sum payable under an insurance policy and makes
payments in accordance with the settlement option chosen.
- Surety Bond: An agreement
providing for monetary compensation in the event of
a failure to perform specified acts within a stated
period. The surety company, for example, becomes responsible
for fulfillment of a contract if the contractor defaults.
- Surgical Expense
Insurance: Health insurance policies, which
provide benefits toward the physician's or surgeon's
operating fees. Benefits may consist of scheduled amounts
for each surgical procedure.
- Surgical Schedule: A list of cash allowances
attached to the policy, which are payable for various
types of surgery, with a maximum amount based upon the
severity of the operation.
- Surgical Schedule:
A list of maximum amounts payable by the policy for
various types of surgery, with the amount based on the
severity of the operation.
- Surplus: The amount by
which the value of an insurer's assets exceeds its liabilities,
i.e., the net worth of an insurance company.
- Surplus Lines: (1)
A risk or a part of a risk for which there is no normal
insurance market available. (2) Insurance written by
non-admitted insurance companies.
- Surrender charge: an amount retained
by the issuer of a life insurance policy when a policy
is canceled, typically assessed only during the first
five to ten years of a policy.
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