<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>				<article id="-1543383705"><artname>Special Uses for Cash Value Life Insurance</artname><p>The combination of <glossary def="A form of insurance that pays a specific amount of money to a designated beneficiary after the insured person dies. The most popular types of life insurance are endowment, term, whole life, universal life, variable life, and variable universal life." primary="Life Insurance">life insurance</glossary> protection and accumulating value makes <glossary def="Life insurance that builds cash value that the owner can surrender for the cash surrender value." primary="Cash Value Life Insurance">cash value life insurance</glossary> policies suitable for many uses.</p><p>The most important use of life insurance is to replace the <glossary def="The monetary return on one's labor or investments. Income may be wages, salaries, bonuses, dividends, or interest." primary="Income">income</glossary> lost in the event of your death. It can help pay your family's immediate and ongoing <glossary def="A liability in the form of a bond, loan agreement, or mortgage, owed to someone else with the promise of repayment by a certain date, which is the debt's maturity." primary="Debt">debts</glossary>. The <glossary def="The dollar amount to which the holder of a life insurance policy is entitled if the policy is surrendered to the insurance company after the surrender period." primary="Cash Value">cash value</glossary> of your policy can be used for almost any financial need you can think of. Here is a list of some of the most common uses of cash value:</p><ulist>   <item><b>Education funding</b>. Use the <glossary def="The medium of exchange used in trade or commerce." primary="Money">money</glossary> you've saved in your policy to pay for your children's education.</item>   <item><b>Retirement funding</b>. You can use the cash value of your policy at <glossary def="Termination of employment due to age, choice, or physical limitation. Certain benefits, such as Social Security payments, are available to those who retire. In finance, retirement is the paying of a debt when or before it is due." primary="Retirement">retirement</glossary> to supplement your other retirement funds. You can even use it to purchase an <glossary def="A level stream of equal dollar payments that lasts for a fixed time. An example would be a person's yearly allowance paid out from a lump sum of money he or she invests with an insurance company. This yearly payment continues for a set number of years or until the person's death. The payout may begin at once or may start at a future date." primary="Annuity">annuity</glossary> that can give you a source of monthly income for the rest of your life.</item></ulist><p><glossary def="1. An entity that engages in commercial activities in some particular sector, such as industry, retail, or professional services. 2. The commercial activity in which a business engages." primary="Business">Business</glossary> owners can also use cash value policies for services such as:</p><ulist>   <item><b>A deferred compensation program</b>. The equivalent of the deferred compensation is used to pay the <glossary def="1. A regular periodic payment for an insurance policy. 2. An additional cost above the normal cost. 3. The amount by which a security sells above its par value. If an investor buys a $1,000 bond for $1,030, she has paid a premium of $30." primary="Premium">premium</glossary>, and the cash value is used to pay the <nodef>future</nodef> <glossary def="The amount to be paid to an insurance policyholder or a beneficiary at retirement, death, or at the end of a period of insurance or other coverage. In retirement planning, benefits are the amount to be paid upon retirement." primary="Benefit">benefits</glossary> of deferred compensation. This type of plan also provides a <glossary def="The amount to be paid by a life insurance company upon the death of the insured, to be collected by that person's survivors or beneficiaries." primary="Death Benefit">death benefit</glossary> should the employee die prematurely.</item>   <item><b>Salary continuation</b>. This use creates employee incentives by offering extra retirement and death benefits.</item>   <item><b>Split-dollar arrangements</b>. In these arrangements, the employer owns the policy and pays the premiums, but the employee names the <glossary def="One who inherits or receives part of a health savings account, an estate, life insurance/annuity proceeds, education savings account, or retirement account; or one for whom a trust is created." primary="Beneficiary">beneficiary</glossary> (the person receiving the benefits). When the employee dies, the employer gets funds equal to the cash value of the policy with the rest going to the beneficiary.</item></ulist><p>You can cancel your policy and "<glossary def="To cash in a life insurance policy, usually before its maturity date. The value of the money the policyholder receives is called the surrender value. In estate planning terminology, to surrender is to restore an estate to whoever is entitled to it." primary="Surrender">surrender</glossary>" it back to your <glossary def="A contract in which one party, called the insurer, agrees to protect another party, called the insured, against loss, damage, or medical costs in return for a premium. Another way to look at insurance is to see it as the assumption of risk by another party. In return for a periodic fee (the premium) and a set of requirements by which to abide, an insurance company will assume risks taken by those covered. Insurance companies are regulated by the insurance commissioners of their respective states or territories." primary="Insurance">insurance</glossary> company to receive your cash value in a <glossary def="A one-time payment of all money due." primary="Lump-Sum Distribution">lump sum</glossary> of money. You can surrender the entire policy or just part of it. You may have to pay a surrender charge depending on the <glossary def="The date on which a debt or other negotiable instrument comes due and must be paid." primary="Maturity">maturity</glossary> of the policy. You <nodef>will</nodef> also have to pay <glossary def="A payment to federal, state, and/or local governments based on the sales price of a product, on worker income, or on other property and activities." primary="Tax">taxes</glossary> on the <glossary def="A charge for using another's money. Interest is usually stated as a percentage of the amount borrowed and can be charged in a variety of ways, such as accrual, compounding, or simple interest." primary="Interest">interest</glossary> you made on the cash value.</p><p>Cash value life insurance provides much more than just financial <nodef>security</nodef> in the event of one's death. The money you build in a cash value policy can be used for almost any financial need you can think of.</p></article>	