Rowena admits it was a TV ad that convinced her to buy funeral insurance. She'd be happy with a "no-frills" send-off but says she feels trapped in the arrangement, which will see her pay $40,000 by the time she's 90.
You’re paying $88 dollars a month forever? Why not just put that into a savings account and easily beat the amount of the coverage without having to go through the struggle of fighting an insurance company that is clearly ripping you off.
And roping your children into the same bad deal? Why would a parent pay for an adult offsprings funeral insurance to begin with? And for more than a decade without sitting down and thinking about it.
The way they present everything is very predatory and designed to confuse people wiith poor financial literacy. They prey on peoples emotions about not wanting to be a burden to their children, and it is presented in a misleading way. A lot will offer the full amount of your premiums back, which makes it sound like you can’t lose. But in effect people are being conned into providing a no-interest loan, which can’t be retrieved if another need arises and if you can’t or don’t continue the payments you lose the lot.
This is just a lack of finance skills.
You’re paying $88 dollars a month forever? Why not just put that into a savings account and easily beat the amount of the coverage without having to go through the struggle of fighting an insurance company that is clearly ripping you off.
And roping your children into the same bad deal? Why would a parent pay for an adult offsprings funeral insurance to begin with? And for more than a decade without sitting down and thinking about it.
That’s the point of the article, that she feels that she was targetted as someone of poor financial skills and taken advantage of.
Makes me feel like having a chat with my mum about what she’s currently paying to who.
The way they present everything is very predatory and designed to confuse people wiith poor financial literacy. They prey on peoples emotions about not wanting to be a burden to their children, and it is presented in a misleading way. A lot will offer the full amount of your premiums back, which makes it sound like you can’t lose. But in effect people are being conned into providing a no-interest loan, which can’t be retrieved if another need arises and if you can’t or don’t continue the payments you lose the lot.