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Glossary of Insurance Terms
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- Calendar-year Deductible: Amount
payable by an insured during a calendar year
before a group or individual health insurance
policy begins to pay for medical expenses.
- Cancelable: A contract of health
insurance that may be canceled during the
policy term by the insurer or insured.
- Cancellation: The discontinuance of
an insurance policy before its normal
expiration date, either by the insured or the
company.
- Capacity: (1) The amount of capital
available to an insurance company or to the
industry as a whole for underwriting general
insurance coverage or coverage for specific
perils. (2) The amount of insurance a company
or the industry are able to write, due to
limitations on or availability of capital.
- Capital Gain: Profit realized on
the sale of securities. An unrealized capital
gain is an increase in the value of securities
that have not been sold.
- Capital Retention Approach: A
method used to estimate the amount of life
insurance to own. Under this method, the
insurance proceeds are retained and are not
liquidated.
- Capitation: A method of payment for
health services in which a physician or
hospital is paid a fixed, per capita amount
for each person served regardless of the
actual number of services provided to each
person.
- Captive Insurance Company: A
company owned solely or in large part by one
or more non- insurance entities for the
primary purpose of providing insurance
coverage to the owner or owners. The company's
stock is controlled by one interest or a group
of related interests so as to provide coverage
for their business operations. A captive
insurance company may be a
nonadmitted, nonresident, or
foreign insurer. Sometimes it may provide
reinsurance to a self-insured or a
domestic company.
- Captive Insurer: Insurance company
established and owned by a parent firm in
order to insure its loss exposures while
reducing premium costs, providing easier
access to a reinsurer, and perhaps easing tax
burdens. See also
Association captive.
- Cargo Insurance: Type of
ocean marine insurance designed to protect
the shipper of the goods against financial
loss if the goods are damaged or lost.
- Career average formula: A
pension plan formula that bases retirement
benefits on earnings during all years of
service to the employer.
- Cash Surrender Value: The amount
available in cash upon voluntary termination
of a policy by its owner before it becomes
payable by death or maturity.
- Casualty Insurance: Insurance
concerned with the insured's legal liability
for injuries to others or damage to other
persons' property; also encompasses such forms
of insurance as plate glass, burglary, robbery
and workers' compensation.
- Catastrophe: Event which causes a
loss of extraordinary magnitude, such as a
hurricane or
tornado.
- Causes-of-loss Form: Form added to
commercial property insurance policy that
indicates the causes of loss that are covered.
There are four causes-of-loss forms: basic,
broad, special, and earthquake.
- Cede: To transfer all or part of a
risk written by an insurer (the ceding, or
primary company) to a reinsurer.
- Certificate of Insurance: A
statement of coverage issued to an individual
insured under a group insurance contract,
outlining the insurance benefits and principal
provisions applicable to the member.
- Certified Financial Planner (CFP):
Professional who has attained a high degree of
technical competency in financial planning and
has passed a series of professional
examinations by the College of Financial
Planning.
- Certified Insurance Counselor (CIC):
Professional in property and liability
insurance who has passed a series of
examinations by the Society of Certified
Insurance Counselors.
- Cession: Amount of the insurance
ceded to a reinsurer by the original insuring
company in a reinsurance operation.
- Change of Occupation Clause:
Provision in a health insurance policy
stipulating that if the insured changes to a
more hazardous occupation, the benefits are
reduced based on the amount of benefits the
premium would have purchased for the more
hazardous occupation.
- Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC):
An individual who has attained a high degree
of technical competency in the fields of
financial planning, investments, and life and
health insurance and has passed ten
professional examinations administered by The
American College.
- Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU):
An individual who has attained a high degree
of technical competency in the fields of life
and health insurance and who is expected to
abide by a code of ethics. Must have minimum
of three years of experience in life or health
insurance sales and have passed ten
professional examinations administered by The
American College.
- Chartered Property and Casualty
Underwriter (CPCU): Professional who has
attained a high degree of technical competency
in property and liability insurance and has
passed ten professional examinations
administered by the American Institute for
Property and Liability Underwriters.
- Choice No-Fault: Allows auto
insured's the choice of remaining under the
tort system or choosing no-fault at a reduced
premium.
- Claim: A request for payment of a
loss which may come under the terms of an
insurance contract.
- Claims Adjustor: Person who settles
claims: an agent, company adjustor,
independent adjustor, adjustment bureau, or
public adjustor.
- Claim-made policy: A liability
insurance policy under which coverage applies
to claims filed during the policy period.
- Class Rating: Rate-making method in
which similar insureds are placed in the same
underwriting class and each is charged the
same rate. Also called manual rating.
- CLU: See
Chartered Life Underwriter.
- Coinsurance: (1) A provision under
which an insured who carries less than the
stipulated percentage of insurance to value,
will receive a loss payment that is limited to
the same ratio which the amount of insurance
bears to the amount required; (2) a policy
provision frequently found in medical
insurance, by which the insured person and the
insurer share the covered losses under a
policy in a specified ratio, i.e., 80 percent
by the insurer and 20 percent by the insured.
- Collateral Source Rule: A legal
rule, which states that the defendant cannot
introduce any evidence that shows the injured
party has received compensation from other
collateral sources.
- Collision Insurance: Protection
against loss resulting from any damage to the
policyholder's car caused by collision with
another vehicle or object, or by upset of the
insured car, whether it was the insured's
fault or not.
- Combined Ratio: Basically, a
measure of the relationship between dollars
spent for claims and expenses and premium
dollars taken in; more specifically, the sum
of the ratio of losses incurred to premiums
earned and the ratio of commissions and
expenses incurred to premiums written. A ratio
above 100 means that for every premium dollar
taken in, more than a dollar went for losses,
expenses, and commissions.
- Commercial General Liability Policy (CGL):
Commercial liability policy drafted by the
Insurance Services Office containing two
coverage forms-an occurrence form and a
claims-made form.
- Commercial Lines: Insurance for
businesses, organizations, institutions,
governmental agencies, and other commercial
establishments.
- Commercial Multiple Peril Policy: A
package of insurance that includes a wide
range of essential coverages for the
commercial establishment.
- Commercial Package Policy (CPP): A
commercial policy that can be designed to meet
the specific insurance needs of business
firms. Property and liability coverage forms
are combined to form a single policy.
- Commission: The part of an
insurance premium paid by the insurer to an
agent or broker for his services in procuring
and servicing the insurance.
- Commissioner: A state officer who
administers the state's insurance laws and
regulations. In some states, this regulator is
called the director or superintendent of
insurance.
- Common Stock: Securities that
represent an ownership interest in a
corporation.
- Community Property: A special
ownership form requiring that one-half of all
property earned by a husband or wife during
marriage belongs to each. Community property
laws do not generally apply to property
acquired by gift, by will, or by descent.
- Company Adjustor: Claims adjustor
who is a salaried employee representing only
one company.
- Comparative Negligence: Under this
concept a plaintiff (the person bringing suit)
may recover damages even though guilty of some
negligence. His or her recovery, however, is
reduced by the amount or percent of that
negligence.
- Completed Operations: Liability
arising out of faulty work performed away from
the premises after the work or operations are
completed. Applicable to contractors,
plumbers, electricians, repair shops, and
similar firms. This form of
liability insurance provides coverage for
bodily injury and property damage rising from
completed or abandoned operations, provided
the incident occurs away from premises owned
or rented by the insured. Operations are
deemed completed at the earliest of: (1) when
all operations to be performed by or on behalf
of the insured under contract have been
completed; (2) when all operations to be
performed by or on behalf of the insured at
the site of the operations have been
completed; (3) when the portion of work out of
which injury or damage rises has been put to
its intended use by a party other than the
contractor or subcontractor.
- Comprehensive Automobile Insurance:
Coverage designed to provide protection
against loss resulting from damage to the
insured auto, other than loss by collision or
upset.
- Comprehensive General Liability
Insurance: Under this form of insurance
and regarding a covered occurrence, the
company will pay all sums the insured becomes
legally obligated to pay as damages due to
bodily injury (Coverage A) or property damage
(Coverage B).
- Comprehensive Major Medical Insurance:
A policy designed to give the protection
offered by both a basic and a major medical
health insurance policy. It is characterized
by a low
deductible amount, a coinsurance
feature, and high maximum benefits.
- Comprehensive Medical Expense
Insurance: A form of health insurance
which provides, in one policy, protection for
both basic hospital expense and major medical
expense coverages. The major medical part of a
comprehensive policy is characterized by a
deductible amount, coinsurance, and high
maximum benefits.
- Comprehensive Personal Liability
Insurance: Protection against loss arising
out of legal liability to pay money for damage
or injury to others for which the insured is
responsible. It does not include automobile or
business operation liabilities.
- Compulsory Auto Liability Insurance:
Insurance laws in some states require
motorists to carry at least certain minimum
auto coverages. This is called compulsory
insurance.
- Compulsory Insurance: Any form of
insurance which is required by law.
- Compulsory Insurance Law: Law
protecting accident victims against
irresponsible motorists by requiring owners
and operators of automobiles to carry certain
amounts of liability insurance in order to
license the vehicle and drive legally within
the state.
- Computer Extra Expense Insurance:
Coverage designed to provide protection if
computer or EDP equipment is damaged or
destroyed by fire or any other insured peril.
In such an event it would probably be
necessary to incur certain extra expenses to
continue business operations
- Concealment: Deliberate failure of
an applicant for insurance to reveal a
material fact to the insurer.
- Concurrent Causation: Legal
doctrine that states when a property loss is
due to two causes, one that is excluded and
one that is covered, the policy provides
coverage.
- Conditional Receipt: A receipt
given for premium payments accompanying an
application for insurance. If the application
is approved as applied for, the coverage is
effective as of the date of the prepayment or
the date on which the last of the underwriting
requirements, such as a medical examination,
has been fulfilled.
- Conditionally Renewable:
Continuance provision of a health insurance
policy under which the company cannot cancel
the policy during its term but can refuse to
renew under certain conditions stated in the
contract.
- Conditions: Provisions inserted in
an insurance contract that qualify or place
limitations on the insurer's promise to
perform.
- Confining Sickness: An illness that
confines an insured person to his home or to a
hospital.
- Conservation: The attempt by the
insurer to prevent the lapse of a policy.
- Consideration: One of the elements
for a binding contract. Consideration for an
insurance policy is acceptance by the
insurance company of the payment of the
premium and the statement made by the
prospective policyholder in the application,
balanced by the insurance company's promise to
provide benefits in the case of loss.
- Consideration Clause: The clause
that stipulates the basis on which the company
issues the insurance contract. In health
policies, the consideration is usually the
statements in the application and the payment
of premium.
- Consequential Loss: Financial loss
occurring as the consequence of some other
loss. Often called an indirect loss.
Consequential loss or damage is indirect loss
or damage resulting from loss or damage caused
by a covered peril, such as fire or windstorm.
In the case of loss caused where windstorm is
a covered peril, if a tree is blown down and
cuts electricity used to power a freezer and
the food in the freezer spoils, iIf the
insurance policy extends coverage for
consequential loss or damage then the food
spoilage would be a covered loss. Business
Interruption insurance, extends consequential
loss or damage coverage for such items as
extra expenses, rental value, profits and
commissions, etc.
- Contents Broad Form: See
Homeowners policy.
- Contingent Annuity Option: An
option under which an employee may elect to
receive, under certain conditions, a reduced
amount of annuity with the same income, or a
specified fraction, to be paid after his death
to another person designated as his contingent
annuitant, for that person's lifetime. The
contingent annuitant is usually the husband or
the wife. (See
Joint and Survivor Annuity)
- Contingent Beneficiary: The person
or persons designated to receive the benefits
of a policy or plan if the primary beneficiary
dies while the insured is living.
- Contingent Liability: Liability
arising out of work done by independent
contractors for a firm. A firm may be liable
for the work done by an independent contractor
if the activity is illegal, the situation does
not permit delegation of authority, or the
work is inherently dangerous.
- Contingent Owner: The person to
succeed as owner of a life insurance policy if
the original owner dies.
- Contract: A binding agreement
between two or more parties for the doing or
not doing of certain things. A contract of
insurance is embodied in a written document
called the policy.
- Contract Holder: The group, entity
or person to whom a group annuity contract is
issued.
- Contractors Liability Insurance:
Coverage designed to provide protection for:
(1) Premises/Operations. The premises portion
provides for payment on the insured's behalf
of all sums he or she becomes liable to pay,
resulting from bodily injury and/or property
damage caused by an insured peril and rising
out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of
premises and operations in progress. The
operations portion covers operations in
progress and is intended for situations where
your principal business operations are
performed away from your premises. (2)
Completed Operations. This portion of
liability insurance provides for possible
liability for bodily injury and/or property
damage after work is complete and the insured
has left the job site.
- Contractual Liability: Legal
liability of another party that the business
firm agrees to assume by a written or oral
contract. It is common in construction and
other agreements (written or oral) for one
party to assume the liability of another. This
is sometimes referred to as a hold harmless
agreement. The extent to which one holds
another harmless varies from contract to
contract, job to job, etc.
- Contribution by Equal Shares: Type
of other-insurance provision often found in
liability insurance contracts that requires
each company to share equally in the loss
until the share of each insurer equals the
lowest limit of liability under any policy or
until the full amount of loss is paid.
- Contributory: A group insurance
plan issued to an employer under which both
the employer and employee contribute to the
cost of the plan. Seventy-five percent of the
eligible employees must be insured. (See
Noncontributory.)
- Contributory Negligence: Negligence
of the damaged person that helped to cause the
accident. Some states bar recovery to the
plaintiff if the plaintiff was contributory
negligent to any extent. Others apply
comparative negligence.
- Conversion Privilege: The right
given to an insured person to change insurance
without evidence of medical insurability,
usually to an individual policy upon
termination of coverage under a group
contract.
- Convertible Bond: A bond that
offers the holder the privilege of converting
the bond into a specified number of shares of
stock.
- Convertible Term Insurance: Term
insurance which can be exchanged, at the
option of the policyholder and without
evidence of insurability, for another plan of
insurance.
- Coordination of Benefits (COB): The
mechanism used in group health insurance to
designate the order in which the multiple
carriers are to pay benefits and to prevent
duplicate payments.
- Corridor Deductible: Major medical
plan deductible that excludes benefits
provided by a basic plan if both a basic and a
supplemental group major medical expense
policy are in force.
- Cost Basis: An amount attributed to
an asset for income tax purposes; used to
determine gain or loss on sale or transfer;
used to determine the value of a gift
- Cost Containment: The controller
reduction of inefficiencies in the
consumption, allocation, or production of
health care services that contribute to higher
than necessary costs.
- Cost-of-Living Rider: Benefit that
can be added to a life insurance policy under
which the policy owner can purchase one-year
term insurance equal to the percentage change
in the consumer price index with no evidence
of insurability.
- Coverage: The scope of protection
provided under a contract of insurance; any of
several risks covered by a policy.
- Coverage for Damage to Your Auto:
That part of the personal auto policy insuring
payment for damage or theft of the insured
automobile. This optional coverage can be used
to insure both collision and
other-than-collision losses.
- Covered: A person covered by a
pension plan is one who has fulfilled the
eligibility requirements in the plan, for whom
benefits have accrued, or are accruing, or who
is receiving benefits under the plan.
- Covered Expenses: Hospital,
medical, and miscellaneous health care
expenses incurred by the insured that entitle
him/her to a payment of benefits under a
health insurance policy. Found most often in
connection with major medical plans, the term
defines, by either description,
reasonableness, or necessity to specify the
type and amount of expense which will be
considered in the calculation of benefits.
- Covered Participant: A person
covered by a pension plan is one who has
fulfilled the eligibility requirements in the
plan, for whom benefits have accrued, or are
accruing, or who is receiving benefits under
the plan.
- CPCU: See
Chartered Property and Casualty Underwriter.
- Credibility: A statistical measure
of the degree to which past results make good
forecasts of future results.
- Credibility Factor: The weight
given to an individual insured's past
experience in computing premiums for future
coverage.
- Credit Health Insurance: A form of
health insurance on a borrower, usually under
an installment purchase agreement. The
benefits cover the obligations of the borrower
and are payable to the creditor.
- Credit Life Insurance. Term life
insurance issued through a lender or lending
agency to cover payment of a loan, installment
purchase, or other obligation, in case of
death.
- Credit Insurance: A guarantee to
manufacturers, wholesalers, and service
organizations that they will be paid for goods
shipped or services rendered. Applies to that
part of working capital which is represented
by accounts receivable.
- Crop Hail Insurance: Coverage
designed to provide financial protection
against damage to growing crops as a result of
hail or certain other named perils.
- Cross Purchase Agreement: specifies
the terms for the surviving partners or
shareholders to buy a deceased's share of the
business's ownership.
- Cross Liability Endorsement: In the
event of claim by one insured for which
another insured covered by the same policy may
be held liable, this endorsement covers the
insured against whom the claim is made in the
same manner as if separate policies had been
issued. However, it does not operate to
increase the insurance company's overall limit
of liability.
- CSR: Customer service
representatives support the work of insurance
agents with a variety of tasks that must be
done within a company or agency to deliver
services to and handle requests from clients.
- Current Assumption Whole Life
Insurance: Nonparticipating
whole life policy in which the cash values
are based on the insurer's current mortality,
investment, and expense experience. An
accumulation account is credited with a
current interest rate that changes over time.
Also called interest-sensitive whole life
insurance.
- Currently Insured: Status of a
covered person under the Old-age, survivors,
and Disability Insurance (OASDI) program who
has at least six quarters of coverage out of
the last thirteen quarters, ending with the
quarter of death, disability, or entitlement
to retirement benefits.
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