The percentage of U.S. households with life insurance coverage is at its lowest in 50 years, leaving millions of families without a safety net, industry experts say.
Only 44% of households have an individual life insurance policy, and 30% have no individual or employer-provided life insurance, according to a recent survey by LIMRA, an industry-sponsored group.
Some 11 million households with children younger than 18 — viewed as families with the greatest need for coverage — have no life insurance.
The drop in insurance coverage comes at a time when premiums for term life insurance are significantly lower than they were a decade ago. Behind the decline:
At the same time, 40% of families with children under age
18 said they would have immediate trouble paying expenses
if the primary breadwinner died.
Procrastination can backfire, because young, healthy people
can usually get the least expensive premiums. A lot of people
really overlook the whole need (for insurance) until they have
a health condition, and then life insurance prices are out of
reach for them.
In 2010, there were 184,873 "affiliated agents"— insurance agents who primarily or exclusively sell one insurance company's products — down from more than 246,000 two decades ago, according to LIMRA. And life insurance agents who have stayed in the business are increasingly selling permanent life insurance to affluent families. Permanent life insurance has a savings component and doesn't expire, but it is more expensive than term insurance.
Insurance companies are adopting several strategies to reach out to middle-income families who don't have a life insurance agent.
Most insurance is still purchased "face to face from a live person at the kitchen table."
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