So you see the times cant tell you everything, do a google search, you wont find anything!
If I die in ten minutes, Wor Lass is £200K better off, for £15 per month direct debit I pay each month. (I pay a similar one for my ex-wife, since she's the primary carer of my children.)
Okay, £200K mightn't set Wor Lass up for life, but at 32 she's young, slim and attractive. Within a few years, (at least) she'd be shacked up with some other bloke. And why shouldn't she if I'm dead and gone?
And I'd hate to think of her with another bloke, holidaying in Tenby every year at my expense!
At least she's not going to be relying on the State to look after her.
Right now, if I had to pay £200 to see some IFA, for a product that will cost me £15 per month; then that would put me off.
If you purchase life insurance from a newspaper's best-buy guide, it's just a simple telephone call and a bit of form filling.
Caustic,
I used to be the Paymaster for an infantry battalion in Chepstow. We strongly 'encouraged' all soldiers to go for PAX accident and life insurance, which I think was underwritten by Norwich Union at the time.
It was just a simple form to fill in; that's why we encouraged it. You purchased units of cover for accident and/or life insurance.
When we deployed on tour, we had different desks for different tasks that the soldiers had to attend. One of them was the 'PAX' desk, and if a soldier refused to sign up for accident and life insurance, he was 'interviewed' by his OC. Obviously we had a 100% success rate, and no IFA was present.
The feeling was, how can a soldier call himself responsible for the lives of men and equipment when he can't be responsible for his dependants when he died? So not having accident and life insurance could affect your promotion prospects; maybe.
It probably wasn't the best policy any soldier could've had, but it was better than NOTHING. The simplicity of it - just a quick form and paid directly from your wage - was the selling point.
I've also assisted in sorting out four soldier's financial affairs after they died, and the worst one was a soldier who died getting his tonsils removed (honest - they couldn't stop the bleeding - apparantly).
He had two children and wasn't insured. He was a member of the Army Dependant's Fund, so his wife received about £1000 and a non-attibutable pension (not much).
Caustic, many members here may not be as financially astute as yourself, and the thought of getting an IFA may put them off altogether; since it's another hurdle.
But phoning a best buy life insurance company from the newspaper is easy (as long as you're an average sort of bloke; health-wise).
Surely you must agree that some life insurance is better than no life-insurance?