| |
Life Insurance
- Provides payment upon insured's death
Life insurance is any insurance relating to a risk
depending on human life. This includes contracts
providing payment on the insured person's death,
endowments providing payment either on survival to a
specified date or on earlier death and annuities
which are paid throughout the annuitant's lifetime
but cease on death.
Life license
candidates are provided with a course that covers term life
insurance, whole life insurance, universal life insurance, variable
life insurance, and annuities.
|
|
| |
These policies offer payments to employees who are
(usually temporarily, rarely permanently) unable to
work because of any injury or illness, even if it is
not job-related. Unlike workers' compensation, this
coverage may not involve any aspect of health
insurance, life insurance, or payments for pain and
suffering. Similarly to most employer-supplied
health insurance, these plans are essentially just
open-market plans with the advantage of a negotiated
group rate. That is, they are similar to what an
individual would buy, but they are purchased with a
volume discount. Another general fact about them is
that they tend to offer rather basic, low-end
coverage, essentially because most people balk at
paying for anything more. Sometimes each employee
has the option to buy upgraded coverage if they are
willing to pay for it.
Worker's compensation (also known by variations
of that name, e.g., workman's comp, workmen's
comp, worker's comp, compo) offers payments to
employees who are (usually temporarily, rarely
permanently) unable to work because of a
job-related injury. However, workers'
compensation is in fact more than just income
insurance, because it may pay compensation for
economic loss (past and future), reimbursement
or payment of medical and like expenses
(functioning in this case as a form of health
insurance), general damages for pain and
suffering, and benefits payable to the
dependents of workers killed during employment
(functioning in this case as a form of life
insurance).
Property & Casualty Insurance -
Coverage for property damage and bodily injury
Property insurance covers physical assets such as building, equipment,
furnishings, fixtures, and inventory. Casualty Insurance coverage
is primarily for the legal liability of a person (individual or
organization) that results from negligent acts and omissions causing
bodily injury and/or property damage to a third party. It protects
a property owner or other person from loss or injury sustained as
a result of theft, vandalism or similar occurrences. Property insurance
may cover aviation insurance, boiler and machinery insurance, glass
insurance and crime insurance.
|
|