August 3, 2004
Policy of protection
Life insurance helps families prepare for the unexpected
Page 2 of 2
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“Let’s say you’re 24 years old, married and you have a couple of kids and you have a mortgage,” Whorton said. In that case, a 20-year policy might make sense because if you died, your beneficiaries would have money to live on, pay off mortgages or pay for children’s educations.

“People in their 30s usually buy term life insurance and mutual funds,” Williams said. “In their 20s and 30s, you’re just trying to get protection. You’re limited in money, but you’re just trying to make sure your needs are covered.”

To do that, customers should ask insurance agents for complete needs analyses before buying a policy. That requires providing the agent with personal information, such as future goals and current liabilities. If a customer doesn’t want to provide that information, “the rule of thumb is that seven times their annual income is a good place to start,” Williams said.

Thanks to low interest rates and competition in the industry, term rates have fallen for more than a decade. A $500,000 policy for a 40-year-old could probably be bought for less than half that today, according to Linda Stern, who covers finance issues for Reuters.

But that might change soon. Costs are up because of consolidation in the reinsurance market — where insurance companies insure their policies. That’s led some companies to raise rates 5 percent to 10 percent in recent months, according to CBS Marketwatch.

“Before those price hikes really kick in would be a good time to buy a new policy if you’re underinsured, or to reject an old, expensive one,” Stern wrote.

Customers can also convert to permanent coverage during the life of their term policy regardless of any health changes, Whorton said.

Williams also advises people to consider disability insurance policies.

“Certainly, the breadwinner or two breadwinners are the big risk for losing one of those incomes for a certain period of time,” he said. “We can protect them through a disability income plan.”

Williams said people ages 25 to 60 are three times more likely to miss up to six months of work because of injury than they are to die.

“I guess people look at it as more of a luxury than a necessity,” Williams said. But 44,000 of Kanawha County’s 411,000 residents — and 410,000 of the state’s 1.8 million residents — receive some type of disability payment, Williams said.

“That certainly proves that disability insurance is something everybody needs,” he said.

Since her first husband’s death, Taylor-McCoy became involved with Woodmen, a fraternal nonprofit organization that is owned and operated by its members. Members are connected by “a desire to better their lives, their families’ lives and their communities,” according to the company’s Web site.

Taylor-McCoy said her family and her church helped her deal with her husband’s death. But she also became so involved with Woodmen that in January, she was elected to the company’s board of directors.

“I’m just a little person from West Virginia and I’m on the board of directors for a national company,” she said. “I was determined to raise my children; I was a den mother. I couldn’t have done all that if I hadn’t had insurance.”

To contact staff writer Paul Wilson, use e-mail or call 348-5179.

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