Insurance, Estates, and Ethics in Canada
| Table of Contents | |
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| Chapter 1: The Future Is Nearer Than You Think | 1 | 
| Knowledgeable Agents | 1 | 
| Acquiring Assets | 1 | 
| Estate Planning | 2 | 
| Wasted Dollars | 3 | 
| Whishing Our Way into Retirement | 4 | 
| Accurate Information Required | 5 | 
| Estate Control | 6 | 
| All Estates Need a Will | 8 | 
| Determining An Asset’s Value | 10 | 
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| Chapter 2: Will You Outlive Your Assets? | 12 | 
| Buying Power | 12 | 
| The Bank of Canada and Inflation | 13 | 
| Permanent and Variable Portfolios | 14 | 
| What to Expect | 14 | 
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| Chapter 3: Recordkeeping and Wills | 17 | 
| Record-Keeping: What to Keep | 17 | 
| Where and How to Store | 18 | 
| Access and Privacy / Retention and Review / Executor-Readiness | 19 | 
| Wills | 19 | 
| Conclusion | 22 | 
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| Chapter 4: Trusts in Canada | 23 | 
| Agent’s Role: When a Trust May Help | 23 | 
| Defining a Trust | 24 | 
| Types of Trusts | 25 | 
| Testamentary Trusts / Family Trusts / Irrevocable Trusts | 25 | 
| Alter Ego Trusts / Joint Partner or Common-Law Partner Trusts | 26 | 
| Henson Trusts / Qualified Disability Trusts (QDTs) | 26 | 
| Agent’s Role: Special-Needs Planning | 27 | 
| Insurance Trusts | 27 | 
| Bare Trusts | 28 | 
| Example: | 28 | 
| Education Trusts (Informal “in-trust-for” accounts vs. Registered Education Savings Plans – RESPs) | 29 | 
| Charitable Remainders Trusts | 29 | 
| Employee Benefit Trusts / Health & Welfare Trusts (and Employee Life & Health Trusts – ELHTs) | 29 | 
| Trusts for minors (simple “guardianship trusts”) | 29 | 
| Money Management Tool / Probate Considerations | 30 | 
| Agent’s Role: Beneficiaries, Ownership, and Probate | 30 | 
| Additional Considerations | 31 | 
| Example: | 31 | 
| In Lieu of Trusts | 32 | 
| Example: | 33 | 
| Trust Distribution for Minors | 34 | 
| Selecting Trustees | 35 | 
| Canadian Legal and Tax Context | 35 | 
| Proper Trust Use | 36 | 
| Trust Misconceptions and Misrepresentation | 37 | 
| Agent’s Role: Set Realistic Expectations | 39 | 
| Some Truths About Trusts | 39 | 
| Trusts in Practice: Realities and Cautions | 42 | 
| Agent’s Role: Documentation and Coordination | 43 | 
| Agent’s Role: Funding and Fit | 44 | 
| Plan for Change | 44 | 
| Creditors | 45 | 
| Trust Use RE: Medicaid vs the Canadian System | 46 | 
| Avoiding Probate Proceedings | 46 | 
| Estate Privacy / Generation Skipping | 47 | 
| Asset Management, Conservation, and Distribution | 48 | 
| Agent’s Rold: Annual Reviews | 50 | 
| In Conclusion | 50 | 
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| Chapter 5: Life Insurance | 51 | 
| How Much Is Enough? | 52 | 
| Premiums are a guaranteed cost / Insurance protects against a potential loss | 52 | 
| Today & Future Monthly Expenses Charts | 53 | 
| The Life Insurance Trust / Term Insurance | 56 | 
| Annually renewable term / Level premium term | 57 | 
| Example: | 57 | 
| Cash Value Insurance | 58 | 
| Three basic kinds of cash value policies: | 60 | 
| Whole Life Policies | 60 | 
| Example: | 61 | 
| Advantages & Disadvantages | 61 | 
| Three common forms of whole life insurance | 62 | 
| Example: | 62 | 
| Limited-Pay Whole Life (e.g. 10-Pay, 20-Pay, Paid-Up at 65) | 62 | 
| Example: | 62 | 
| Single-Premium Whole Life | 62 | 
| Similar advantages | 63 | 
| Example: | 63 | 
| Universal Life Policies | 64 | 
| Example #1: / Example #2: | 64 | 
| Variable Life Policies | 65 | 
| Example #1: | 65 | 
| Example #2: | 66 | 
| Other Types of Life Policies | 66 | 
| Endowment Life Policies | 66 | 
| Survivorship (Joint Last-to-Die) Life Policies | 66 | 
| Example: | 67 | 
| Joint First-to-Die Life Policies | 67 | 
| Example: | 67 | 
| Term-to-100 (T100) | 67 | 
| Credit (or Mortgage) Life Insurance / Group Life Insurance | 68 | 
| Policy Options | 68 | 
| Nonforfeiture Options | 68 | 
| Disability Waivers / Family or Child Riders | 69 | 
| Payor Waiver of Premium / Guaranteed Insurability Option (GIO) | 70 | 
| Accidental Death Benefit (ADB) | 70 | 
| Accelerated Death Benefit (Living Benefit) | 70 | 
| Critical Illness and Long-Term Care Riders | 70 | 
| Deciding Which | 70 | 
| The Agent’s Role | 71 | 
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| Chapter 6: Annuities & Client Best Interest | 73 | 
| Retirement Risks | 73 | 
| Immediate and Deferred Annuities | 74 | 
| Side Note: What is Assuris? | 75 | 
| Where does this leave the modern Canadian agent and advisor? | 78 | 
| Group Annuities | 78 | 
| Deferred Group Annuity Contracts | 78 | 
| Deposit Administration Contracts | 79 | 
| Immediate Participation Guarantee (IPG) Contracts | 79 | 
| Canadian Context Today | 79 | 
| Agent Note: How group annuities show up in a client conversation | 80 | 
| Annuities in Canada: When They Make Sense & for Whom | 81 | 
| Example #1 / Example #2: | 83 | 
| Commission Surrender Periods | 84 | 
| Commission chargebacks / Premature annuitization | 84 | 
| Annuities as a Relatively Stable Retirement Tool | 85 | 
| Key trade-offs | 86 | 
| Example: | 86 | 
| Bottom line | 86 | 
| Annuity Product Evolution – Canadian Context | 87 | 
| Surrender charges and early “bail-out” features | 87 | 
| High-rate eras and balance-sheet discipline | 87 | 
| Intex-linked crediting versus Canadian alternatives | 87 | 
| Two-tier interest designs / Broader distribution, same licensing rules | 88 | 
| Why do these changes matter? | 88 | 
| Agent Note: Practical takeaway | 88 | 
| Tax Treatment and Deferral | 89 | 
| “Tax-deferred” does not mean tax-free | 89 | 
| The benefit of deferral is straightforward | 89 | 
| Safety Matters | 90 | 
| Compounding power | 90 | 
| The safety of investment is a primary goal | 90 | 
| How Annuities are Backed | 91 | 
| Avenue 1 – The portfolio that backs the annuity | 91 | 
| Avenue 2 – Capital and surplus (the financial cushion) | 91 | 
| Consumer protection and the “last line” | 92 | 
| Periodic Annuity Withdrawals | 92 | 
| Annuitization Options | 94 | 
| Annuitization definition | 94 | 
| Example: | 94 | 
| Annuitization trades liquidity for lifetime security | 94 | 
| Payout Options | 95 | 
| Single Life (life only) / Joint-and Survivor (joint life) | 95 | 
| Life with Guaranteed Period ) a.k.a. “life and period-certain”) | 95 | 
| Cash-Refund (life with refund feature) | 95 | 
| A few Canadian clarifications | 96 | 
| Annuity Models | 96 | 
| Deferred annuities – save now, decide later | 96 | 
| Immediate annuities – income starts right away | 96 | 
| Market-linked models – segregated fund contracts | 97 | 
| Annuitizing a market-linked contract / Risk, guarantees, and taxation | 97 | 
| Bottom line | 97 | 
| Investment and Insurance Component | 97 | 
| The insurance guarantees are a key differentiator | 98 | 
| At the payout stage, annuitization is optional | 98 | 
| Most contracts allow partial withdrawals ad fund transfers under stated rules | 98 | 
| Costs reflect both investment management and insurance protection | 98 | 
| Example: | 99 | 
| Estate Considerations | 99 | 
| Annuities are private insurance contracts | 99 | 
| Private Annuities | 100 | 
| Example: | 100 | 
| To summarize: | 101 | 
| Annuities, Positioning, Trade-offs, Costs, Liquidity, and Tax | 101 | 
| Annuities Compete With GICs - Example: | 101 | 
| Two broad annuity types - Example: | 101 | 
| Term-Certain annuity - Example: | 102 | 
| Segregated fund contracts and Liquidity limits - Example: | 102 | 
| Tax Treatment - Example: | 102 | 
| Costs are Embedded or Explicit - Example: | 103 | 
| Estate and creditor-protection - Example: | 103 | 
| Suitability is about matching the tool to the job - Example: | 103 | 
| Investment Expenses and Loads | 104 | 
| Regulation | 105 | 
| Annuities as a Complement to Pensions and Other Retirement Income | 106 | 
| Conclusion | 107 | 
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| Chapter 7: Retirement Funding Through Pensions | 109 | 
| Pension Plan Players | 109 | 
| Defined Benefit Plans | 112 | 
| Agent’s Rold: Survivor choice versus “pension-plus-insurance” | 115 | 
| Hypothetical: | 115 | 
| Defined Contribution Plans | 115 | 
| Agent’s Role: Turning accounts into income. | 118 | 
| Example: | 118 | 
| An Example of Both Types of Plans | 118 | 
| Agent’s Role: Stitching DB and DC into one paycheque | 119 | 
| Example continuation: | 120 | 
| Protections | 120 | 
| Inflation | 122 | 
| Agent’s Role: Inflation hedging with product mix. | 122 | 
| Example: | 122 | 
| When There’s Trouble | 124 | 
| Agent’s Role: Sponsor risk and commuted-value triage. | 125 | 
| Example: | 125 | 
| 401(k) Plans | 127 | 
| Collecting Pension Funds | 128 | 
| Agent’s Role: Early retirement trad-offs and stop-gap insurance | 128 | 
| Example: | 128 | 
| At Retirement | 132 | 
| Agent’s Role: Behaviour-proofing lump sums | 132 | 
| Example: | 133 | 
| Bringing it together, the agent’s checklist for pension-centered households. | 134 | 
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| Chapter 8: Other Financial Considerations | 135 | 
| Tax-Free Savings Accounts / Agent Note | 135 | 
| Spousal Planning | 135 | 
| Agent Note | 136 | 
| Withdrawal Order / Agent Note | 136 | 
| Fees and Contract Terms / Agent Note | 136 | 
| Workplace Plans / Agent Note | 137 | 
| Public Pensions / Agent Note | 137 | 
| Estate and Beneficiary Choices / Agent Note | 137 | 
| Health Costs and Longevity | 137 | 
| Agent Note | 138 | 
| Client Behaviour / Agent Note | 138 | 
| Short-Term RRSP / Agent Note | 138 | 
| Pooled Plans | 138 | 
| Agent Note | 139 | 
| Prescribed Annuities / Agent Note | 139 | 
| Over-Contributions to RRSPs and TFSAs / Agent Note | 139 | 
| CPP/QPP Timeing | 139 | 
| Agent Note | 140 | 
| Advising the Self-Employed: Insurance and Estate Planning Perspectives | 140 | 
| Agent Note | 140 | 
| Many owners incorporate as they grow. / Agent Note | 140 | 
| Canadian Registered Plans | 140 | 
| Agent Note | 141 | 
| Incorporation / Agent Note | 141 | 
| Canada Taxes Estates / Agent Note | 141 | 
| Valuation | 141 | 
| Agent Note | 142 | 
| Minority Shareholdings / Agent Note | 142 | 
| Remuneration Planning / Agent Note | 142 | 
| Passive Investments / Agent Note | 142 | 
| Beneficiary and Ownership Choices | 142 | 
| Agent Note | 143 | 
| Documentation Matters / Agent Note | 143 | 
| Common Situations an Insurance Advisor May Encounter | 144 | 
| Corporations | 144 | 
| Legal Instruments in Estate Planning | 147 | 
| When Death Occurs | 149 | 
| General Steps are Consistent | 149 | 
| Assets that commonly bypass probate | 150 | 
| Agent Note | 151 | 
| Canadians can transfer assets in several ways | 151 | 
| Wills | 153 | 
| Information to gather in advance | 153 | 
| Agent Note | 155 | 
| Example: | 155 | 
| Agent Note | 155 | 
| Practical Checklist | 156 | 
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| Chapter 9: Ethics – a Practical Approach | 158 | 
| What We Mean By “Ethics” in the Insurance Profession | 158 | 
| Duty | 159 | 
| A useful way to see ethics “under the hood” is through three lenses: | 159 | 
| Because ethics lives in real-world judgement, quick “pressure-tests” help | 160 | 
| CISRO | 161 | 
| CISRO Principle of Conduct Preamble | 161 | 
| CISRO Principle of Conduct | 162 | 
| Applying the CISRO Principles | 163 | 
| 1. Compliance/Outcomes Example 1: | 163 | 
| Example 2: | 164 | 
| Why it matters | 164 | 
| 2. Customers’ Interests / Example 1 / Example 1 | 164 | 
| Why it matters | 164 | 
| 3. Conflict of Interest / Example 1 | 164 | 
| Example 2 / Why it matters | 165 | 
| 4. Advice / Example 1 / Example 2 / Why it matters | 165 | 
| 5. Disclosure / Example 1 / Example 2 / Why it matters | 166 | 
| 6. Product and Service Promotion / Example 1 / Example 2 | 166 | 
| Why it matters | 166 | 
| 7. Claims, Complaints Handling, and Dispute Resolution | 167 | 
| Example 1 / Example 2 / Why it matters | 137 | 
| 8. Protection of Personal and Confidential Information | 167 | 
| Example 1 / Example 2 / Why it matters | 167 | 
| 9. Competence / Example 1 / Example 2 / Why it matters | 168 | 
| 10. Oversight / Example 1 / Example 2 / Why it matters | 168 | 
| CCIR | 169 | 
| Scope | 169 | 
| Applying the CCIR Code of Conduct | 171 | 
| Chart | 171 | 
| Provincial and Territorial Oversight on Ethical Standards. | 175 | 
| More Examples of “Legal but Maybe Not Ethical” | 176 | 
| 1) Technically suitable, but not the client’s best option. | 176 | 
| 2) Promotion that passes compliance but isn’t genuinely balanced. | 176 | 
| 3) A replacement that meets the letter of the rules but misses the spirit of fairness. | 177 | 
| 4) “Minium-compliant” privacy with risky day-to-day habits. | 177 | 
| 5) Slow, impersonal complaint handling that still meets the deadline. | 177 | 
| Vulnerable Clients and Undue Influence | 178 | 
| Agent Notes | 179 | 
| AML/KYC Ethics Beyond Compliance | 179 | 
| Agent Notes | 180 | 
| Digital Advice, AI Tools, and E-Signatures | 180 | 
| Agent Notes | 182 | 
| Compensation, Incentives, and Conflicts | 182 | 
| Agent Notes | 183 | 
| Privacy in Practice: PIPEDA, Law 25 (Québec), and Retention | 184 | 
| Agent Notes | 185 | 
| Side Note – “Tokenizing” Chart | 186 | 
| Due Diligence | 187 | 
| Professional Representation | 189 | 
| How an agent should act on a sales call | 190 | 
| For Example: | 191 | 
| Cold Calling | 191 | 
| Getting in the Door | 192 | 
| For Example: | 192 | 
| For Example: | 192 | 
| Organization | 193 | 
| Full Disclosure | 194 | 
| Product Replacement | 194 | 
| The ethical risks can include: | 194 | 
| Example 1: / Example 2: | 196 | 
| Product Replacement Toolkit (how to do it ethically and clearly) | 196 | 
| Agent Notes | 198 | 
| Claims – Time Ethics and Beneficiary Issues | 198 | 
| Agent Notes | 200 | 
| Advertising and Social Media Ethics | 200 | 
| Policy Delivery and Post-Sale Ethics | 202 | 
| Periodic Reviews | 203 | 
| Preparing for the Review | 203 | 
| Conducting the Review / Documentation and Follow-Up | 204 | 
| Why Reviews Matter to Ethics | 205 | 
| Errors and Omissions (E&O) Insurance | 205 | 
| Why E&O belongs in an ethics chapter | 205 | 
| Typical allegations and the ethical duty behind them | 205 | 
| Dual-role and conflict considerations | 205 | 
| Authority, responsibility, and client expectations | 206 | 
| Practical E&O hygiene that aligns with ethics | 206 | 
| Canadian perspective on liability relationships | 206 | 
| An example of apparent authority / Criminality vs. professional negligence | 207 | 
| E&O coverage forms and why they matter ethically | 207 | 
| Bottom Line | 208 | 
| Giving Our Clients What Is Due Them | 208 | 
| Conclusion | 210 | 
| Last Page: | 211 | 
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United Insurance Educators, Inc.
PO Box 1030
Eatonville, WA 98328