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Life Health > Life Insurance

Annuity Complexity Demands Standard Illustrations

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Today’s annuities have very advanced concepts and benefit characteristics–market value adjusting, separate investment accounts, indexing and guaranteed living benefits, to name a few.

What the industry needs now is a standardized illustration process for those products.

To see why, it helps first to review some developments from the life insurance side of the business, and the lessons learned there–in particular, the evolution of modern day life products and the eventual delivery of a standardized illustration requirement on Jan. 1, 1999 (via the Life Illustration Model of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners).

Life products in the 1980s and 1990s were refreshed and revitalized through innovation, delivering new and more sophisticated designs to the market. This surge closely resembles the annuity product development of the last 10-15 years.

But the pioneering of new concepts and revolutionary product designs at breakneck speeds made it difficult for insurers and regulators to maintain reasonable controls to ensure consumers could understand the dynamic designs.

One example is the “vanishing-premium” design and the crisis it spawned. The design involved illustration proposals that introduced the paid-up concept on products requiring lifetime premium payments. Here, the premium outlay, beyond the “paying period,” was sustained by the accrued interest generated by historically high interest rates.

But, as is widely known, interest rates normalized over the years, so these products received far less interest crediting than projected. That resulted in the paid-up policy year set points being significantly extended. The response? Development of the first standard for life insurance illustrations (via the 1999 NAIC Model) and several new enhanced disclosure and comparison requirements. There was also a new focus on suitability standards.

These responses produced true 360-degree coverage: They aimed at improving suitable sales to empower agents to do the right thing, and requiring disclosures and standardized illustration requirements to empower clients to make the right choice.

It’s important to note that the vanishing-premium debacle involved just one assumption and one concept, but it precipitated a never-before-experienced consumer onslaught that brought about a new era of consumer disclosures in life insurance.

This is not to suggest that the annuity marketplace runs the risk of a similar interest rate conundrum.

The risk in the current annuity market is that the industry’s increasingly sophisticated designs bring many new enhancements and concepts that inevitably lead to more complexity for the consumer–which then typically produces heightened consumer grievances.

Developing a standardized illustration process within the annuity marketplace would make winners all of the key stakeholders in this issue. Consider these lessons from the life insurance sector:

Insurers: The process extends additional protection against unsuitable sales, reducing consumer issues and potential liabilities while potentially increasing sales for insurers offering products of superior value.

Agents: Uniform standardized illustrations help level the playing field and highlight the companies with the best product and their best features.

Regulators: Uniform standardized illustrations further foster open and free competitive markets while ensuring full and complete disclosure of policy benefits to consumers.

Consumers: A fully informed consumer is more likely to make the right choice on the product best suited for the need, and at the best value.

In summary, the insurance industry is providing consumers with needed financial products. These products are growing increasingly complex. The task is to support increased sales of these products, ensure better client understanding of the product being purchased, and prevent adverse consumer outcomes.

A standardized illustration process for today’s increasingly complex and sophisticated annuity benefits could help bridge those gaps.

It would foster increased competition by making it easier for consumers to evaluate all aspects of the benefit in order to compare and measure its performance against that of other insurers’ products. Consumers would see how the benefit actually valuates and responds under different scenarios and assumptions. They would also get a complete and sobering account of the benefit and would be less likely to be surprised by an unexpected benefit design.

Robert A. Chester is state insurance examiner with the Connecticut State Insurance Department, Hartford, Conn. His e-mail address is [email protected].


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