Policyholders’ Dividends Due and Unpaid
Reasons?
*
• Premium payment transactions not recorded within the last processing cycle for the reporting period.
Accounting for Dividend Accumulation Transactions
Accounting to leave dividends on deposit:
Liabilities for Deposit-Type Contracts
Supplementary Contracts Without Life Contingencies
Supplementary contracts arise from the termination of a life insurance contract that has been terminated by death, maturity, or surrender, and the transfer of proceeds to the supplementary contract account.
payment options
• To receive a guaranteed fixed number of payments.
If a contractholder who has left supplementary contract proceeds at interest dies, such proceeds would be paid in a lump sum to a named beneficiary or to the contractholder’s estate.
Liabilities for Deposit-Type Contracts
Accounting for Supplementary Contract Transactions
The insurer’s Summary of Operations also reflects a decrease in policy reserves for an amount equal to the reserve that had been held on the terminated insurance policy.
Liabilities for Deposit-Type Contracts
Structured Settlements
are agreements characterized by the periodic payment of fixed amounts to a claimant in connection with the settlement of a legal claim.
Payments may last for the lifetime of the payee or they may be for a particular period of time.
The party responsible for making structured settlement payments may make payments directly to a claimant.
Accounting treatment is similar to supplementary contracts without life contingencies.
• debit to the appropriate benefit payment account
• credit to a liability account to record the deposit.
Liabilities for Deposit-Type Contracts
Retained Asset Accounts
It is used primarily to pay life insurance proceeds on the settlement of a death claim. Some insurers also use it to distribute other lump sum payments such as surrenders, pensions, and matured endowments.
Liabilities for Deposit-Type Contracts
Accounting for Retained Asset Transactions
Accounting treatment is similar to supplementary contracts without life contingencies.
• debit to the appropriate benefit payment account
• credit to a liability account to record the deposit (retained asset liability)
Liabilities for Deposit-Type Contracts
Guaranteed Interest Contracts and Funding
Agreements
Liabilities for Premium Amounts
Premiums Received in Advance
Several Years’ Premiums at one time
insurer discounts the value of such premiums and accept a lesser amount in cash.
Premiums Received in Advance
Accounting for Transactions
advance premiums are identified separately for life and for accident and health business.
credited to one or more premium income accounts. It is therefore necessary to debit premium income as part of an accrual entry with the offsetting credit to the premiums paid in advance liability.
Premium Deposit Funds
• credit a premium deposit fund for the amount of money received
• credit annual interest on the amount in this
fund.
Using this method, individual premiums are paid from the premium deposit fund when due, and the premium income account is credited at that time.
Premium Deposit Funds
Accounting for Transactions
the premium deposit fund does not represent discounted premiums. Rather interest is credited on amounts in the fund annually at agreed upon rates. The crediting of such interest is reflected in the financial statement as interest expense.
no premium income is reflected in the financial statement for amounts that are not yet due.
Terminal Dividends
Policyholders’ Dividend Accumulations
Dividends are left to accumulate at interest
Policyholder Coupons
Provision for Experience Rating Refunds
Deposit accounting treatment is given to contracts that carry no mortality or morbidity risk to the insurer. Reporting of the detail associated with such contracts appears in Exhibit 7, Deposit-Type Contracts.
Liabilities for Deposit-Type Contracts
Annuities Certain
Liabilities for Premium Amounts
Premiums Received in Advance
It is “unearned” as of the statement date and should not be reflected in earned premiums.
•For life contracts, advance premiums are those premiums received, which are due on or after the next policy anniversary date. Use mean reserve that assume the annual premium has been paid.
•For accident and health contracts, advance premiums are those premiums received, which are due on or after the next premium due date. Use Mid-terminal Reserve that assume premiums are paid to the valuation date.