Headline Was In Error
The headline for the illustration for the Personal Finance article on Retired Lives Reserve (April) is misleading. The figures are apparently for a conventional whole life policy with the insured as the owner and the corporation paying 100% of the premium. But it is clear from Section 79 of the Internal Revenue Code that this kind of policy does not qualify as a group life insurance plan, as the headline for the chart suggests.
A conventional group term life insurance plan would not have any cash value at age 65. And if the policy on the chart is a split plan, in which a portion of each insured person's coverage is a conventional whole life plan and a portion of it a true group term plan, then only a portion of the premiums paid by the corporation would be taxable as compensation to the employee, not the entire $60,200 premium shown as "taxable as income to employee."
EDITOR-NOTE:
Mr. Turner is correct. The figures are for a company-paid whole life insurance policy. The headline writer erred in labeling it a group insurance plan.
ADVERTISEMENT
FROM OUR PARTNERS
Select Services
- Forced to pay more?
- Salesforce costs up to 65% more than Microsoft Dynamics CRM. Compare.
- Collaborate in the cloud with Office, Exchange, SharePoint and Lync videoconferencing.
- Begin your free trial at Microsoft.com/office365
- Get on the same page
- Show and tell by sharing your screen instantly at join.me. Free.
- Shred No-Handed!
- Hands Free Shredding From Swingline Lets You Do More Productive Things!
- Winning new customers?
- SMB experts share their secrets at PersonallyPB.com/smb
- Turn Fans into Customers
- Social Campaigns from Constant Contact. Sign up now - it's free!


