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The value of life cover may diminish over time
Weekend Argus on Saturday
|June 28, 2025
ECONOMIST Azar Jammine did a little bit of investigative work recently, reviewing a life insurance policy. What he found was rather astonishing: it would pay more for the policy owner to die now because, in about a decade, the premiums paid would amount to more than the value of the policyholder's life in terms of the policy — the sum insured.
Jammine, director and chief economist at Econometrix, tells Personal Finance that, in the case of this policy taken out in 2002, this is because the cost of the monthly debit order increases each month, yet the amount someone has insured their life for doesn’t.
Denise Gabriels, Lead Ombud at the Life Insurance Division in the National Financial Ombud Scheme, said that her office had received some complaints that mirror this issue. Between the late 1980s to early 2000s, insurance in the form of Universal Life policies, which were sold, which Gabriels said were based on a guaranteed period during which time premiums didn’t go up, and then they would, either yearly or through an immediate steep increase.
Gabriels added that, as the risk of dying increases, so does the cost of life cover.
In cases where policies are “age-rated, the premiums will go up while the cover amount could well stay the same,” Wayne Mostert, MD of ASI Wealth, explained. In certain policies, especially permanent ones like whole-life or investment-linked life cover, it’s possible to reach a point where you've paid more in premiums than the value you'd get out, he told Personal Finance.
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