Health insurance might pay for your medical expenses, but you need something like disability insurance to make your mortgage payments and pay your household expenses?
Disability Insurance Is The Answer
For most of us the answer is disability insurance, which provides income when an illness or injury makes it impossible to earn a living. Disability insurance is the policy to have, whatever your age, to continue the income you need.
What Does Disability Insurance Do For Me?
While employers often provide short term disability, few companies offer long term disability insurance unless there is a union contract. If you don't recover, or have your own disability insurance contract, you will have to use your savings to survive.
Accordingly, it is in your best interests to protect your income and earnings with a personal disability insurance policy.
How Much Disability Insurance Do You Need?
No insurance company will insure you for your full income as generally the payments are not taxable. Another consideration is: if you have group disability insurance from your employer, there may be a cap on how much you can get.
Some Additional Disability Insurance Benefits:
Escalator Rider - an benefit that annually increases the amount of your income .
Return-To-Work-Provision - a benefit of your disability insurance policy that pays you a portion of your disability income if you can work part time.
There are numerous other disability insurance riders which can be added, but which increase the overall cost of the insurance policy. Employer group disability insurance policies are not portable, which is the best, most simple reason to own personal disability insurance.
Insurance For Young People
This article is written by a 27 year old female (borderline Generation X / Y) called Rachel. Rachel spent six years at university, has no outstanding debts with the exception of government student loans. Rachel also has no pension plan, no life insurance, savings or property investment. Despite reports of average starting salaries for graduates beginning at £18,000, some even at £25,000, Rachel started on £14,000 three years ago, despite gaining a First Class Honours and offering extensive work experience.
This isn't therapy through Microsoft Word, but it's not uncommon to read reports of “apathetic youth” in the media. For driven young graduates who didn't quite land where they expected – it is a little frustrating to be branded “ignorant”, when it is already difficult working off university debts and fighting your way onto the career ladder in a very competitive market.
What is the point of having independence in old age, if you cannot experience it in youth? That is not to say young people should be encouraged or supported in their debateable extravagance, only that we remain unconvinced by old age. We may have seen our parents lose money in shares or private pension funds, or get divorced and lose money through property. We may be worried about global warming and in an age of suicide bombers, we may not even be confident about how much control we have on our lives anyway. With so much choice on what we can do, but so few people empowering us with confidence, we may well rebel for years to come – chopping and changing until we find something that fits or until we get tired.
It's too easy to brand young people as apathetic just because they haven't got pensions or life insurance. Smug thirty-somethings who received full grants, graduated in a less competitive market and bought property when the house market was low are quite happy to “tut tut” at their twenty-something shadows in their lack of financially savvy experience, but today's twenty somethings are being squeezed from all angles:
* Student loans replace university grants
* Commercialisation of university life, with banks and credit card companies actively courting student customers
* High property prices
* Very competitive job market
What we need are comprehensive financial research sites that provide information which directly relates to our circumstances. Websites such as moneynet ( ) with their product price comparisons and finance guides (especially the student finance guide) –do go most of the way, but we want something that also takes into account our aspirations, situations and will go the distance. We're not adverse to pensions, life insurance and mortgages, but if we're going to splash out lots of dough, it has to be a reasonably reliable investment and we remain unconvinced from we've seen so far in provocative, panic-stirring media.
It's true that products such as life insurance would at least protect our families from our debts and that's important, but with regard to pension, who's to say that in our old age, we may not revert back to student lifestyles – living in communities and on budgets.
Resources:
Google and the search command “define: generation X” or define: generation y” for age reference (The source of inspiration for this article!)
Both Ivon T. Hughes & Rachel Lane are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Ivon T. Hughes has sinced written about articles on various topics from Home Improvement, Finances and Insurance. Ivon T. Hughes of the Hughes Trustco Group is a licensed Insurance Broker. Author of The Life Insurance Handbook. Get a FREE Copy TODAY! Email: Web:. Ivon T. Hughes's top article generates over 49500 views. to your Favourites.
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