Title: Perils Threatening IncomeEarning Ability
1Perils Threatening Income-Earning Ability
- Death
- Disability
- Superannuation
- Unemployment
2Risks Arising From Uncertainty of Time of Death
- The individual faces two risks that arise from
uncertainty concerning time of death - 1. Premature death (death while others remain
dependent on individuals income) - 2. Superannuation (the risk of retiring without
adequate assets to cover living expenses during
retirement)
3Death and Superannuation
- The risks of death and superannuation are
mutually exclusive and complementary events - 1. If individual dies prematurely, he or she will
have no need for retirement funds. - 2. If individual lives until retirement,
provision for premature death will not be used.
4Objectives in Managing Personal Risks
- 1. To avoid deprivation of the individual and
those dependent on him or her in the event of
loss that terminates income. - 2. From personal financial planning, sometimes
the goal of transferring the maximum wealth
possible to dependents.
5Identifying Risk of Loss From Premature Death
- Premature death is a source of loss in two ways
- 1. Death triggers expenses associated with death
itself (funeral expenses and other death costs). - 2. Death causes loss of income that the
individual would have earned.
6Measuring Risks Associated With Premature Death
- Two approaches have been suggested for evaluating
the risk of premature death - 1. Human life value
- 2. Needs analysis
7Human Life Value
- The human life value concept is generally
credited to Soloman S. Huebner. - 1. Human life value concept is based on the
individuals income earning ability. - 2. Human life value is the present value of
income lost by dependents as a result of the
persons death.
8Present Value
- Any attempt to measure human life value must
consider the time value of money or the concept
of present value. - 1. Time value of money refers to fact that 1
today is worth more than a year from now. - 2. Money invested at some positive rate of return
will be worth more in the future.
9Time Value of Money (Present Value)
- 1.00 (1.00 X 6) 1.06
- 1.00 .943396 1.06
- 0.943396 .889962 1.06
10Present Value of 1 in N Years
- Year 6 8 10
12 - 1 0.94340 0.92593 0.90909 0.89283
- 2 0.89000 0.85734 0.82645 0.79719
- 3 0.83962 0.79383 0.75131 0.71178
- 10 0.55839 0.46319 0.38554 0.32197
- 20 0.31180 0.21455 0.14864 0.10367
- 30 0.17411 0.09938 0.05731 0.03338
11Present Value of 1 Annually for N Years
- Year 6 8 10 12
- 1 0.94340 0.92593 0.90909 0.89286
- 2 1.83339 1.78326 1.73554 1.69005
- 3 2.67301 2.57710 2.48685 2.40183
- 10 7.36009 6.71008 6.49506 5.65022
- 20 11.46992 9.81815 8.51356 7.46944
- 30 13.76483 11.25778 9.42691 8.05518
12Economic Value to Dependents
- Years Until Present Value of 10,000
Age Retirement At 5 At 6 At 7
At 8 - 20 45 177,740 154,588 136,055 121,084
- 25 40 171,590 150,462 133,317 119,246
- 30 35 163,741 144,982 129,476 116,545
- 35 30 153,724 137,648 124,090 112,477
- 40 25 140,939 127,833 116,535 106,747
- 45 20 124,622 114,699 105,940 98,182
- 50 15 103,796 97,122 91,079 85,594
- 55 10 77,217 43,600 70,235 67,100
- 60 5 43,294 42,123 41,001 39,927
13Difficulties With Human Life Value Concept
- 1. Indicated value depends on estimate of future
changes in income. - 2. Indicated value varies with discount rate.
- 3. Indicated value does not necessarily represent
a measure of loss. - no one may be dependent on the individuals
income - part of income may be replaced from other sources
(e.g. social security)
14Needs Analysis Approach
- Amount of insurance that an individual should
purchase is properly determined by needs
analysis. - 1. Huebners life value approach looks at income
that would be lost. - 2. Needs approach attempts to identify the
allocation of that income and the purposes for
which it would have been used.
15Needs Analysis
- Needs analysis has three basic steps
- 1. Identify the needs that would arise or
continue following death of the individual - 2. Identify resources that would be available
(social insurance benefits, employer-provided
benefits, savings) - 3. Measure difference between 1. and 2. above
16Lifestyles and Needs Analysis
- Needs will vary with individuals situation and
lifestyle. Identifiable lifestyles include - 1. Single individual without dependents
- 2. Single individual with dependents
- 3. Childless couples
- 4. Couples with children - both employed outside
the home - 5. Couples with children - only one employed
outside the home
17Classification of Needs
- CASH NEEDS INCOME NEEDS
- Fund for Last Expenses Funds for Readjustment
- Emergency Funds Dependency Period Income
- Mortgage Payment Funds Life Income for Spouse
- Educational Funds
18Classification of Income Needs
- Income needs may be classified into three groups,
representing different periods - 1. Readjustment income following death
- 2. Income during dependency period
- 3. Income for spouse when children are grown
- blackout period
- retirement
193000
Figure 10.1 Needs Analysis Chart
1,603 OASDI benefit until younger child reaches
age 16 663.60 OASDI benefit until youngest
child reaches age 18
Unfilled Needs
1,200 per month from widows employment
632.60 per month widows OASDI benefit
20Present Value - Future Income Needs
21Estate Liquidity Need
- 1. A federal transfer tax, called the estate tax,
is imposed on transfers at the time of death. - 2. Amounts passed to heirs other than a spouse
that exceed 600,000 are subject to the tax. - 3. To avoid forced sale of assets to pay the
estate tax, life insurance may be needed to
provide liquidity.
22Estate Planning
- The process through which one arranges one's
affairs for the most effective accumulation,
management, and disposition of capital and
income. - The greatest shrinkage of the estate has
historically come from the federal estate tax,
which applies to assets held at the time of death
and certain gifts made during the individuals
lifetime.
23Taxable Estate
- Rates in 1999 began at 37 on taxable estates of
650,000 - go to 55 on estates over 3 million. - The taxable estate is the gross estate minus
allowable deduction. - Tax is subject to a credit that reduces the tax
actually payable. - This credit against tax is commonly referred to
as an estate tax exemption. - 625,000 estate exempt from tax in 1998.
- Subject to increase to 1 million in 2006.
- Family business deduction
24Taxable Estate
- Taxable estate is determined by deducting
allowable exemptions from the gross estate. - Gross estate includes the fair market value of
- all real and personal property owned at the time
of death, including interest in property owned
jointly with another. - proceeds of life insurance on deceaseds life if
deceased possessed incidents of ownership. - Incidents of ownership means such ownership
rights as the right to change beneficiaries,
borrow cash value, or withdraw cash values.
25Deductions
- Gross estate is subject to certain deductions in
determining the portion that is taxable. - credit for state and foreign death taxes.
- marital deduction, which is unlimited.
- applies only to the part of the estate that
actually passes to a surviving spouse. - If a person dies "intestate" the estate is
distributed according to state law. - In many states, a spouse receives 1/3 and 2/3 is
divided equally among the children. - This distribution deprives the estate of the full
benefit of the marital deduction.
26Marital Deduction
- Unlimited marital deduction protects individuals
entire estate from the federal estate tax, but
spouses estate will be subject to the federal
estate tax. - Property left to a surviving spouse becomes a
part of the spouse's estate and is taxed without
marital deduction when he or she dies. - Strategy arrange for the distribution of that
estate in a manner that will maximize the use of
the unified estate-gift tax credit.
27Example
- Bill Smith has an estate in the neighborhood of
1.3 million. - If he leaves his entire estate to Mary, it will
pass without estate tax liability, but the tax is
merely deferred. - If Bill dies in 1999, 650,000 of his estate
could pass to children or other heirs without tax
liability. - The remaining 650,000 may pass to Mary, or it
may pass to the children or other heirs subject
to the estate tax.
28Gifts
- In addition to using the marital exemption and
maximizing the unified credit, a third strategy
is by making gifts prior to death. - Annual gift tax exclusion of 10,000 per donee,
whereby assets may be transferred during ones
lifetime without tax consequences. - 10,000 gift tax exclusion will be adjusted for
inflation after 1998.
29Trusts
- A common tool for implementing estate planning
strategies and for the administration of an
estate. - Arrangement under which the holder (trustee)
undertakes the management of another's property
(called the corpus of the trust), for benefit of
designated persons. - The most widely used trusts are
- the testamentary trust, which is a part of the
will and takes effect after death, and - the living or inter vivos trust, established
during the lifetime of the creator and which may
be revocable or irrevocable in nature.
30Testamentary Trust
- Will not reduce estate taxes at death of the
testator, nor will it reduce estate settlement
costs. - Trust property remains in the estate of the
testator until distribution after will is
probated. - Used to leave property to heirs other than a
spouse (to maximize tax credit), but also
provides for a surviving spouse. - The spouse is the beneficiary of the trust
- other heirs are remaindermen.
- Property in trust is not subject to the marital
deduction, but uses all or part of the unified
credit.
31Living (Intervivos) Trusts
- Revocable inter vivos trust
- The creator reserves the right to terminate the
trust and acquire the property. - The revocable trust does not reduce the estate
tax liability.
- Irrevocable inter vivos trust
- The creator relinquishes right to terminate the
trust and acquire the property. - An absolute and irrevocable trust takes the
property out of the grantor's estate
32Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust
- Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) is used
to avoid the incidents of ownership in a life
insurance contract. - Life insurance is purchased and managed by a
trustee, subject life insurance trust agreement.
- Premiums are paid from funds transferred to the
trust as gifts but not withdrawn by trust
beneficiaries. (Crummey powers) - Key feature is the willingness of beneficiaries
to not withdraw the gift, which they must have
the right to do if it is to qualify as a gift.
33Risks Associated with Superannuation
- Two parts to the retirement risk
- Individual will not have accumulated sufficient
assets by the time retirement arrives - Assets that have been accumulated will not last
for the remainder of his or her lifetime
34The Risk of Outliving the Accumulation
- Some strategy is needed to guarantee that the
individual will not outlive the assets - Conventional tool for this problem is a life
annuity
35Estimating the Accumulation Need
- 1. Monthly income needs during retirement are
projected by some assumed rate of inflation
together with social security benefits, which are
deducted from needs. - 2. If pension benefits will be available,
projected pension benefits are also deducted from
projected need. - 3. Remaining monthly need is converted to an
annuity purchase price to determine total future
capital need.
36Risks Associated with Disability
- 1. Unlike the case in life insurance, disability
income need is not limited to those with
dependents. - 2. Income need may even be greater for the person
without a spouse (no second income, need to hire
a care provider). - 3. If breadwinner dies, income stops but expenses
also decline. - 4. In event of disability, income stops and
expenses will likely increase.
37Probabilities of Death and Disability
- Probability of Probability of Death
Before 90-Day Disability Age Age 65 Before Age
65 - 25 24 54
- 30 23 52
- 35 22 50
- 40 21 48
- 45 20 44
- 50 18 39
- 55 15 32
- 60 9 9
38Needs Analysis for Disability Risk
- 1. Follows same pattern discussed in connection
with life insurance, in which anticipated needs
are projected - 2. Adequate medical expense coverage should be
available to meet increased medical expenses - 3. Program should include provision for continued
contributions to retirement program
39Resources Available to Meet Disability Risk
- 1. Workers compensation benefits for work-related
disabilities - 2. Compulsory Temporary Disability Benefits in
California, Hawaii, New Jersey, New York, Rhode
Island and Puerto Rico - 3. Social Security benefits for total and
permanent disabilities - 4. Employer-provided sick leave or cash benefits
40Addressing Unmet Disability Needs
- 1. Subtract available resources from needs
- 2. Most important disability income need is
long-term disability for both occupational and
nonoccupational disability to supplement Social
Security benefit - 3. Some people will also need short-term coverage
for disabilities that are not covered under
Social Security
41The Medical Expense Exposure
- 1. Personal risk management program is incomplete
without protection against medical expenses - 2. Major consideration should be protection
against catastrophic loss
42Managing the Risk of Unemployment
- Limited options for transferring the risk
- State unemployment programs exist in all states
- Unemployment insurance is available on a limited
basis in connection with installment credit
usually greatly overpriced
43State Unemployment Insurance
- 1. Previous employment in a covered occupation
- 2. Involuntarily unemployed
- 3. Continued attachment to the labor force
(willing and able to work)
44Benefits Under State Unemployment Insurance
- 1. Benefits related to previous earnings
- Typically 1/26 of previous earnings
- About 50 of normal earnings but subject to
statutory maximum - State maxima in 1998 from 180 to 573
- 2. Benefits payable for a maximum period
- Maximum is 26 weeks in 44 states
- Longest maximum in any state is 39 weeks
45Retention and Risk Retention
- RETENTION
- Authorities recommend an emergency fund equal to
from 3 to 6 months expenses - REDUCTION
- comprehensive education
- specialized working skills
- a career that is relatively immune to
fluctuations in employment