Life, Viaticals & Health Insurance

Table of Contents

 

Chapter 1: Understanding Life and Viaticals in Canada and the U.S.

1

 

U.S. Exception

2

 

Transparency in Sales Required in Both U.S. and Canada

2

 

Life & Viatical Settlements in U.S., Then Canada

4

 

Canadian Taxation of Life and Viatical Settlements

4

 

Changes in U.S. Tax Law

6

 

Canadian Life Insurance Exemption

7

 

Canada’s Adjusted Cost Basis for Life Insurance Policies

7

 

Buying Life Insurance Policies

8

 

How Life and Viatical Settlements Function in Canada & U.S.

9

 

Purchasing Partial Policies

10

 

The Difference Between a Broker and Provider

10

 

Viatical Participant Confidentiality in the U.S. and Canada

10

 

Payment & Buyer’s Remorse

11

 

When Death Occurs Soon After Selling a Life Contract

11

 

Keeping Tabs on the Insured Person, Whether in the U.S. or Canada

12

 

Checking Health Status through Physicians

12

 

Extra Policy Benefits

13

 

Other Available Options (Besides Selling the Policy)

13

 

What Every Canadian and American Should be Aware of

13

 

Canadian Life & Viatical History in the Secondary Markets

14

 

Ontario Introduced Life Settlement Bill 162

16

 

Ontario, Canada Bill 162

16

 

Consumer Protections Desired in Both Canada and the U.S.

18

 

Medical Underwriting

19

 

Analyzing the Life Insurance Contract

19

 

Expected Life Spans Differentiate Viatical and Life Settlements

20

 

Policy Ownership Transfer

21

 

Policy Premium Payments

21

 

Outstanding Policy Loans

24

 

Additional Investment Fees

24

 

Escrow Trust Accounts

25

 

Life & Viatical Settlement Disclosures in the U.S. and Canada

26

Chapter 2: Life & Viatical Settlements Turns Life Insurance into an Asset

29

 

Life and Viatical Settlement Participants

30

 

The Life and Viatical Contract

31

 

Contract Standardization in the U.S. and Canada

32

 

Viatical Settlement Terminology is Basically the Same in U.S. & Canada

34

 

Policy Ownership

35

 

Securities

40

 

It Is Important to Remember the Following in Both the U.S. and Canada

43

 

Accelerated Benefits May Offer Better Returns for the Insured

43

 

Secondary Markets in Canada

46

 

Caution

47

 

Life Insurance Tax Treatment in Canada

48

 

The Role of Life Insurance in Canada

52

 

    Changes effective as of 2017

53

 

Application Clean Sheeting

54

 

Contestability Period

55

 

Insured’s Life Expectancy

55

 

Cases of Fraud in the United States

56

 

Legislating the Industry in the U.S. and Canada

56

 

Actuarial Tables Used by Both U.S. and Canadian Companies

58

 

Investor Risks

59

 

Maturity Risk

62

 

     Clinical, Statistical, Multi-Disciplinary

63

 

Minimizing Investment Risk Through Knowledge; Canadians Playing Catch-up

64

 

Getting the True Facts Prior to Evaluation

65

 

Viator Tracking

66

 

Life Insurance Contracts in Canada and the U.S.

67

 

Basic Concepts

67

 

Insurance Companies Measure Risk

68

 

Types of Life Insurance

69

 

What Will the Insurance Cost?

70

 

Term Insurance

71

 

Permanent Insurance

75

 

Universal Life Insurance Policies

78

 

Universal Life Policies Compared to Traditional Plans

79

 

Premiums; Policy Options

82

 

Nonforfeiture Options; Dividend Options

83

 

Settlement Options

84

 

Canadian and U.S. Mandated Provisions

85

 

Incontestability Clauses

86

 

Misstatements in the Application

87

 

Deferment Clause; Nonforfeiture

87

 

Loan Values; Grace Periods and Reinstatement

88

 

Allowed Policy Provisions

89

 

Suicide; Aviation

89

 

War

90

 

General Provisions

90

 

Deduction of Indebtedness and Premium Refund

90

 

Change of Beneficiary

91

 

Assignment

91

 

Beneficiary Designations

91

 

Policy Payments

93

 

Cash Values; Dividends

94

 

Proceeds

95

 

Special Clauses

95

Chapter 3: Viatical Benefits in Canada and the U.S.

98

 

Secondary Life Insurance Contract Markets in the U.S. and Canada

98

 

The Viatical Industry

99

 

Tax Issues

99

 

Viators with Less than a Two-Year Life Expectancy

100

 

Two to Five Year Life Expectancy Estimate

101

 

Life and Viatical Settlements in the U.S. and Canada

102

 

Client Qualifications

103

 

     Requirements 1, 2, and 3

104

 

Illness Creates a Need for Cash

104

 

Canada Joins the Secondary Market

106

 

Canadian Insurance Law

107

Chapter 4: Health Insurance in Canada and the U.S.

111

 

Canada’s Health Care Program

111

 

Misconception Regarding Canadian Availability of Medical Personnel

111

 

Opioid Crisis in Both Canada and the U.S.

117

 

Canadian Funding

124

 

Provinces and Territories Handle Health Insurance

125

 

Buying Private Health Insurance as Canadian Supplemental Coverage

126

 

Canada’s Public Health Care Providers

126

 

Canadian Private Clinics

127

 

  Canadian Courts Conclusions: IX. Conclusion and Orders

128

 

New Health Care Opportunities in Canada and the U.S.

131

 

Prescription Drugs

132

 

Canadian Health Care Funding

133

 

Canadian Worker Evaluations of Employer-Sponsored Plans

138

 

Again, Nothing is Free

139

 

Adequate Health Care is a Global Issue

144

 

     Inverse Care; Impoverishing Care

144

 

     Fragmented and Fragmenting Care; Unsafe Care; Misdirected Care

145

 

Universal Health Care

145

 

Primary Health Care

146

 

Secondary Health Care; Tertiary Health Care

147

 

Critical Illness Insurance

150

 

Characteristics of Critical Illness Insurance

151

 

  Considering Critical Illness Insurance

151

 

Achieving Quality Health Care

153

 

Exclusions in Canadian Coverage

156

 

Canadian and U.S. Long-Term Care Services

157

 

Long-Term Care in Canada

160

 

Fixing Long-Term Care Act, 2021

160

 

  Visitor Policy

163

 

  Continuous Quality Improvement

163

 

  Air Conditioning

164

 

  Palliative Care Philosophy

164

 

  Infection Prevention & Control

165

 

  Calculating Direct Care Targets

165

 

  Medical Directors

165

 

  Staffing

165

 

Medical Accessibility

166

 

  Intergenerational Fairness; Quality Services

166

 

Sustainability

166

 

Long-Term Care in the U.S.

167

 

LTC Insurance

168

 

ADL: Activities of Daily Living

172

 

Benefit Qualification

173

 

Policy Terms

173

 

Paying LTC Costs Out-of-Pocket

173

 

A Citizen’s Responsibility When Aging

175

 

Entering Old Age with Dignity

177

 

Long-Term Care Service Capacity

178

 

  Frailty

180

 

All Ethnic, Religious, and Racial Segments are Affected

181

 

Women and Long-Term Care

181

 

Caregivers; The Spouse

182

 

  Children as Caregivers

182

 

  Paid Caregivers

183

 

  Adult Day Care and Adult Day Health Care

183

 

  Community-Based Care; Respite Care

183

 

  Assisted Living Facilities

184

 

Long-Term Care Insurance Premiums in Canada and the U.S.

187

 

  Premium Due Dates; Withdrawable Premium Fund

188

 

  Policy Reinstatement; Premium Guarantees

189

 

  Premium Waivers; Return of Premium Upon Death

189

 

  Time Limits; Benefit Amounts; Cancelation Guarantees

190

 

  Policy Incontestability; Policy Effective Dates

191

 

  Dependency Determination Under the Policy

192

 

Policy Exclusions and Limitations

193

 

  Inflation Protection

194

 

Considering Need

194

Chapter 5: Stranger-Oriented Life Insurance & Insurable Interests

196

 

Defining STOLI in the U.S. and Canada

196

 

Establishing an Insurable Interest

196

 

When Insurable Interests Exist

198

 

Buying with the Intent to Sell

203

 

  Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada v. Berck

205

 

Actuarial Life Expectancies Used in the U.S. and Canada

207

 

State and Province Legislation

207

 

Life Settlement Participants

209

 

Analyzing the Life Settlement Need for U.S. and Canadian Citizens

210

 

     Steps 1 through 3

211

 

     Step 4

212

 

U.S. & Canadian Policy Transfers and Insurable Interest Requirements

213

 

Recent Regulatory Changes

217

 

A Speculative Contract, Whether in the U.S. or Canada

219

Chapter 6: Life & Viatical Ethics in the U.S. and Canada

222

 

Moral Responsibilities

223

 

Little White Lies

225

 

Ethical Intent

227

 

Ethical Goals

228

 

Promoting Ethical Activity in Canada and the U.S.

229

 

Following U.S. and Canadian Laws

230

 

Ethics in the Workplace

230

 

Some Activities are Always Wrong

231

 

The Same by Any Other Name

232

 

Our U.S. and Canadian Pasts Affect the Future

233

 

U.S. and Canadian Companies Set Guidelines

237

 

  Example

243

 

Promoting Ethical Behavior

243

 

Egoism

246

 

  Is It Possible to Teach Ethical Behavior to Others?

247

 

  What is the Scope of Ethics?

247

 

  What Does it Take to be a Moral Person?

248

 

U.S. and Canadian Quality of Work

248

 

  Creating a Legacy

249

 

Ethics Start at the Top

249

 

  Personal Responsibilities to Other Moral People

249

 

Objectivist Ethics

251

 

  Example

252

 

Keeping our Ethical Codes in the U.S. and Canada

252

 

Mores

255

 

“Fast Buck” Items

257

 

The Professional

257

 

Due Diligence

258

 

 

United Insurance Educators, Inc.

(253) 846-1155

mail@uiece.com