| IDENTITY THEFT INSURANCE |
|
Coverage for expenses
incurred as the result of an identity theft. Can
include costs for notarizing fraud affidavits and
certified mail, lost income from time taken off
from work to meet with law-enforcement personnel
or credit agencies, fees for reapplying for loans
and attorney's fees to defend against lawsuits and
remove criminal or civil judgments. |
| IMMEDIATE ANNUITY |
|
A product purchased with a
lump sum, usually at the time retirement begins or
afterwards. Payments begin within about a year.
Immediate annuities can be either fixed or
variable. |
| INCURRED BUT NOT REPORTED LOSSES / IBNR |
|
Losses that are not filed
with the insurer or reinsurer until years after
the policy is sold. Some liability claims may be
filed long after the event that caused the injury
to occur. Asbestos-related diseases, for example,
do not show up until decades after the exposure.
IBNR also refers to estimates made about claims
already reported but where the full extent of the
injury is not yet known, such as a workers
compensation claim where the degree to which
work-related injuries prevents a worker from
earning what he or she earned before the injury
unfolds over time. Insurance companies regularly
adjust reserves for such losses as new information
becomes available. |
| INCURRED LOSSES |
|
Losses occurring within a
fixed period, whether or not adjusted or paid
during the same period. |
| INDEMNIFY |
|
Provide financial
compensation for losses. |
| INDEPENDENT AGENT |
|
Agent who is self-employed,
is paid on commission, and represents several
insurance companies. |
| INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT/IRA |
|
A tax-deductible savings
plan for those who are self-employed, or those
whose earnings are below a certain level or whose
employers do not offer retirement plans. Others
may make limited contributions on a tax-deferred
basis. The Roth IRA, a special kind of retirement
account created in 1997, may offer greater tax
benefits to certain individuals. |
| INFLATION GUARD CLAUSE |
|
A provision added to a
homeowners insurance policy that automatically
adjusts the coverage limit on the dwelling each
time the policy is renewed to reflect current
construction costs. |
| INLAND MARINE INSURANCE |
|
This broad type of coverage
was developed for shipments that do not involve
ocean transport. Covers articles in transit by all
forms of land and air transportation as well as
bridges, tunnels and other means of transportation
and communication. Floaters that cover expensive
personal items such as fine art and jewelry are
included in this category. |
| INSOLVENCY |
|
Insurer’s inability to pay
debts. Insurance insolvency standards and the
regulatory actions taken vary from state to state.
When regulators deem an insurance company is in
danger of becoming insolvent, they can take one of
three actions: place a company in conservatorship
or rehabilitation if the company can be saved or
liquidation if salvage is deemed impossible. The
difference between the first two options is one of
degree – regulators guide companies in
conservatorship but direct those in
rehabilitation. Typically the first sign of
problems is inability to pass the financial tests
regulators administer as a routine procedure. |
| INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR |
|
An organization such as a
bank or insurance company that buys and sells
large quantities of securities. |
| INSURABLE RISK |
|
Risks for which it is
relatively easy to get insurance and that meet
certain criteria. These include being definable,
accidental in nature, and part of a group of
similar risks large enough to make losses
predictable. The insurance company also must be
able to come up with a reasonable price for the
insurance. |
| INSURANCE |
|
A system to make large
financial losses more affordable by pooling the
risks of many individuals and business entities
and transferring them to an insurance company or
other large group in return for a premium. |
| INSURANCE POOL |
|
A group of insurance
companies that pool assets, enabling them to
provide an amount of insurance substantially more
than can be provided by individual companies to
ensure large risks such as nuclear power stations.
Pools may be formed voluntarily or mandated by the
state to cover risks that can’t obtain coverage in
the voluntary market such as coastal properties
subject to hurricanes. |
| INSURANCE REGULATORY INFORMATION SYSTEM / IRIS |
|
Uses financial ratios to
measure insurers’ financial strength. Developed by
the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners. Each individual state insurance
department chooses how to use IRIS. |
| INSURANCE SCORE |
|
Insurance scores are
confidential rankings based on credit information.
This includes whether the consumer has made timely
payments on loans, the number of open credit card
accounts and whether a bankruptcy filing has been
made. An insurance score is a measure of how well
consumers manage their financial affairs, not of
their financial assets. It does not include
information about income or race.
Studies have shown that people who manage their
money well tend also to manage their most
important asset, their home, well. And people who
manage their money responsibly also tend to handle
driving a car responsibly. Some insurance
companies use insurance scores as an insurance
underwriting and rating tool. |
| INSURANCE-TO-VALUE |
|
Insurance written in an
amount approximating the value of the insured
property. |
| INTEGRATED BENEFITS |
|
Coverage where the
distinction between job-related and
non-occupational illnesses or injuries is
eliminated and workers compensation and general
health coverage are combined. Legal obstacles
exist, however, because the two coverages are
administered separately. Previously called
twenty-four hour coverage. |
| INTERMEDIATION |
|
The process of bringing
savers, investors and borrowers together so that
savers and investors can obtain a return on their
money and borrowers can use the money to finance
their purchases or projects through loans. |
| INTERNET INSURER |
|
An insurer that sells
exclusively via the Internet. |
| INTERNET LIABILITY INSURANCE |
|
Coverage designed to protect
businesses from liabilities that arise from the
conducting of business over the Internet,
including copyright infringement, defamation, and
violation of privacy. |
| INVESTMENT INCOME |
|
Income generated by the
investment of assets. Insurers have two sources of
income, underwriting (premiums less claims and
expenses) and investment income. The latter can
offset underwriting operations, which are
frequently unprofitable. |