Suitability of LTC, Life Insurance & Annuities in Canada

 

Table of Contents

 

Chapter 1: Care Around the World

1

Inverse Care

1

Impoverishing Care

1

Fragmented Care

2

Unsafe Care

2

Conditions Contributing to Health Care Costs

2

Universal Health Care

2

Primary Health Care

3

Secondary Health Care

4

Tertiary Health Care

4

The Canadian Healthcare System

6

Critical Illness Insurance

12

Characteristics of Critical Illness Insurance (Critical Illnesses)

13

Should Individuals Buy Critical Illness Insurance?

14

Achieving Quality Health Care

15

Long-Term Care

19

Long-Term Care Reform in Canada

22

Fixing Long-Term Care Act, 2021

22

  Visitor Policy

24

  Continuous Quality Improvement

25

  Air Conditioning

26

  Palliative Care Philosophy

26

  Infection Prevention and Control

26

  Calculating Direct Care Targets

27

  Medical Directors

27

  Staffing

27

Medical Accessibility

27

Sustainability

27

A Citizen’s Responsibility When Aging

28

Entering Old Age with Dignity

30

Too Few Trained Professionals in the LTC Industry

31

Meeting the Challenge

33

  Informal Caregiver

34

Determining Personal Long-Term Care Risk

34

CLHIA Funding Recommendations

37

Fear of Institutionalization

38

Today’s Realities

38

Changing Populations and Changing Family Rolls

40

Late Life Frailty

40

To Recap

41

Changes in Health Can Result in Financial Depletion

41

Affording the Cost of Insurance

41

Preparing for Future Costs

42

All Ethnic, Religious, and Racial Segments are Affected

42

Making Decisions Based on Genetics and Family History

43

ADL: Activities of Daily Living

43

Making a Logical Assessment

44

Case Managers

44

Insurance Affordability

45

When There is no Insurance Policy in Effect

46

Policy Application

46

Policy Contracts Have Improved Over the Years

47

Qualifying for Long-Term Care Benefits under Policy Terms

49

Women and Long-Term Care

50

Finding Caregivers

50

Children as Caregivers

51

Paid Caregivers

52

Adult Day Care and Adult Day Health (or Medical) Care

52

Community-Based Care

53

Respite Care

54

Assisted Living Facilities

55

Assisted Living National Program Guidelines 2019 to 2020

60

  Introduction

60

  Objective

61

  Expected outcomes

61

  Funding recipients

61

  Program recipients, clients, and individuals

63

  Activities

70

  Expenditures

71

  Funding

74

  Reporting requirements and monitoring and oversight activities

74

  Personal information

75

  Accountability

75

  Official languages

75

  Definitions

75

  Contact information

76

  Related links

76

  Summary of federal classification system for institutional care

76

Locating Assisted Living Facilities

78

Long-Term Care Insurance Policies

79

Policy Terms

83

Participants

83

Premium Due Dates

84

Automatic Withdrawable Premium Fund

84

Policy Reinstatement

84

Premium Guarantees

85

Premium Waivers

85

Return of Premium upon Death

85

Long-Term Care Policy Benefits

86

  Time Limits

86

  Benefit Amounts

86

  Cancelation Guarantees

86

  Policy Ending Date

86

  Policy Incontestability

87

  Policy Effective Dates

87

  Dependency Determination under the Policy

88

Defining Activities of Daily Living

89

  Bathing

89

  Continence

89

  Dressing

89

  Feeding

89

  Toileting

89

  Transferring

89

Policy Exclusions and Limitations

90

Inflation Protection

91

Filing a Long-Term Care Claim

91

  Continuous Versus Individual Claims

93

Considering Need

93

 

 

Chapter 2: Life Insurance in Canada

95

Insurance Agents

95

Life Insurance Contracts (terms)

96

Life’s a Gamble

97

Defining Risk

98

Comfort Level

99

Insurance Risks, Perils & Hazards

100

Chance of Loss

100

Morale & Moral Hazards

101

Law of Large Numbers

101

Types of Risk

102

  Pure & Speculative Risks

103

Investment Risk

104

Issuance

104

Insurable Interest in Life Insurance

106

A Fairytale Case Study

107

Stranger Originated Life Insurance (STOLI)

108

Life & Viatical Settlement Agreements

110

Definitions

110

Understanding the Viatical Product

112

How do Viatical Settlements Work?

113

Purchasing Partial Policies

113

Viatical Participant Confidentiality

113

Paying the Viator

113

Buyer’s Remorse

114

Following Payment for the Life Policy

114

Checking Health Status through Physicians

114

Extra Policy Benefits

114

Other Available Options

115

Viatical Settlement Development

115

Medical Underwriting

116

Insurance Underwriting

117

How Consumers View Them

118

Policy Ownership Transfer

119

Policy Premium Payments

120

Outstanding Policy Loans

122

Additional Investment Fees

123

Escrow Trust Accounts

124

Personal Information Protection & Electronic Documents Act

124

Insurance Policy Effective Dates

125

Material Facts

126

Beneficiary Designations in General

126

 

 

Life Insurance

129

Changing Social Times

129

Two Basic Insurance Terms: Premium & Peril

130

Winning and Losing the Insurance Gamble

130

Determining the Need for Life Insurance

131

Estate Planning: Procedures, Not Products

132

Providing for Others Through Planning

133

Using Discipline to Achieve Security

134

Clarifying Client Objectives

134

The Need for Broader Knowledge

134

Basic Goals of Life Insurance

135

Life Insurance Trusts

135

Trust Beneficiaries

136

Life Insurance is a contract

136

An Estate Planning Tool

137

Term Insurance is All About the Payout

137

Whole Life Insurance: The Granddaddy of Them All

138

Endowment Insurance Policies: Forced Savings

138

Universal Life: Separating Expenses

139

Variable Universal Life: Few Guarantees

139

Survivorship Life: Insuring Two or More People

141

Single Premium Whole Life: One Payment

142

Buy-Sell Agreements

142

 

 

Chapter 3: Annuities in Canada

144

Annuity Terminology

144

General Policy Provisions

148

Planning for Increased Life Spans

149

Longevity Risk

150

Variable Annuities (Segregated Funds)

150

Maturity Guarantees

151

Death Benefit Guarantees

151

Performance of Funds is not Guaranteed

151

Types of Contracts

152

Registered Retirement Savings Plans (RRSP)

153

  Section 146 of the Income Tax Act

153

Non-Registered Annuities

154

Prescribed Treatment/Non-Prescribed Treatment

155

RRSP Types

156

Contributions

157

Spousal RRSP / Taxation of Deferred Annuities

158

Taxation of Deferred Annuities

158

The Decision to Buy

158

Life Income Funds

159

Immediate Annuities

160

Payout Options

160

Single Life Payout Option

161

Joint-and-Survivor Payout Option

162

Installment Refund Life Payout Option

162

Variable Annuity Payout Option

163

Term Certain Payout Option

163

Other Products

163

Dollar Cost Averaging

164

Annuity Beneficiary Designations

164

Annuity Contingent Beneficiaries

165

The Insurance Contract

166

Deposits

167

Surrender Penalties

167

Retirement Savings Plan (RSP) Endorsements

168

Switches

169

Investment Options

169

Product Suitability

170

Saving Adequately

170

The Reason for the Goal (the reward)

171

Determining Goals

174

Basic Product Information Requirements

175

Determining Product Suitability

176

Product Replacement

178

  Twisting

178

  Churning

178

Identifying Suitability Issues

179

It is About Suitability for the Buyer, Not Liquidity

179

A Comprehensive Financial Plan

181

Suitability in the Retail Sale of Financial Products (report)

183

Determining Suitability According to the Report

188

Annuity Surrender Values and Penalties

189

Financially Sound Insurers

190

 

 

Chapter 4: Anti-Money Laundering

191

Abbreviations

192

Client Due Diligence

193

Determining Identification in a Face-to-Face Interview

193

Identification of New Business Clients

194

Confirming the Client’s Business

195

Collection of Beneficial Owner & Director Information

195

Not-for-Profit Organizations

195

Exceptions to Requirements for Business Clients

196

Third-Party Determination

197

Politically Exposed Foreign Person Requirement

197

Retention of Client Records

198

Suspicious Transactions

198

“Red Flag” Indicators

198

Tipping Off

199

Large Cash Transaction Reporting

199

The Proceeds of Crime & Terrorist Financing Administration Monetary Penalties Regulations

199

Terrorism Produces Insurer Risk

199

FATF

200

Proceeds of Crime and Terrorism Financing Act

201

Objective of the Act

201

Know-Your-Client (KYC)

203

Prevention

208

Policy Application

208

Restricted Businesses and Entities

208

Education is Always the Best Defense

209

A Change in Thinking

209

Product Identification

210

Typologies

211

  1.  Single Premium Life Insurance Contracts

211

  2. Early Policy Redemption

211

  3. Claim Fraud

212

  4. Cash Premium Payments

212

  5. “Free Look” Periods on Newly Issued Policies

212

  6. Collusion of Customer Intermediary and/or Insurer Employee

213

  7. Third-Party Premium Payments

213

  8. Risks Involved in International Transactions

213

  9. Fraudulent Customers, Insurers, or Reinsurance Companies

213

Money Laundering Indicators Not Unique to Insurance Products

214

  Cash Transactions

214

  Use of False Addresses and Other Information

214

  Overseas Business from Higher Risk Jurisdictions

214

Characteristics of the Money Launderer

214

 

 

United Insurance Educators, Inc.

mail@uiece.com