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By
Christine Dugas
USA TODAY
The
term life insurance industry is bracing for the arrival of Rule
XXX next year.
The
rule, moving through the states' regulatory processes, would require
insurers to increase the amount of money they set aside as a cushion
against losses on policies with long-term premium guarantees.
The
upshot is likely to be higher premiums on those policies, experts
say. In fact, Rule XXX could raise rates 10% to 40%, depending on
the age of the policyholder and the length of the guarantee, says
Ken Sapp, president of the agency division at Zurich Kemper Life.
Another
outcome might be 20-year, level-premium policies that guarantee
the premium rate for only five years.
"There
will still be cheap term insurance available, but the guarantees
won't be as long," says consulting actuary James Van Elsen.
Currently, New York is the only state with a similar rule, and its
rates tend to be higher than the rest of the nation.
For
example, a 40-year-old male nonsmoker could get a 20-year, guaranteed-premium
policy for $440 a year in most states, says Byron Udell, president
of AccuQuote. But that same person in New York would have to pay
$775 - or $570 to get a 20-year level term policy that isn't fully
guaranteed.
The
National Association of Insurance Commissioners is finishing details
on a model Rule XXX for the states. Several have plans to adopt
a XXX rule. Once that happens, the rest will follow.
February
5, 1999 Edition of USA Today
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