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Insurance
Definitions
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- Gatekeeper: At HMOs, the primary-care
doctor-usually family practitioner, internist,
pediatrician or obstetrician/gynecologist-who
coordinates basic care and recommends tests,
treatment and referrals to specialists.
- General Agency System: Type of life
insurance marketing system in which the general
agent is an independent businessperson who
represents only one insurer, is in charge of a
territory, and is responsible for hiring,
training, and motivating new agents.
- General Damages: Damages awarded to
an injured person for intangible loss which
cannot be measured directly by dollars.
Popularly known as "pain and suffering." General
damages are distinguished from special damages
which are awarded for actual economic loss, such
as medical costs, loss of income, etc.
- General Liability Insurance: Coverage
that pertains, for the most part, to claims
arising out of the insured's liability for
injuries or damage caused by ownership of
property, manufacturing operations, contracting
operations, sale or distribution of products,
and the operation of machinery, as well as
professional services.
- Glass Insurance: Protection for loss
of or damage to glass and its appurtenances.
- Good Student Discount: Reduction of
automobile premium for a young driver at least
sixteen who ranks in the upper 20 percent of his
or her class, has a B or 3.0 average, or is on
the Dean's list or honor roll. It is based on
the premise that good students are better
drivers.
- Grace Period: A specified period
after a premium payment is due, in which the
policyholder may make such payment, and during
which the protection of the policy continues.
- Gross Estate: All of the assets and
liabilities owned at death.
- Gross Negligence: The intentional
failure to perform a manifest duty in reckless
disregard of the consequences as affecting the
life or property of another.
- Gross Premium: The premium paid by
the policyholder.
- Gross Rate: The sum of the pure
premium and a loading element.
- Group Contract: A contract of
insurance made with an employer or other entity
that covers a group of persons identified as
individuals by reference to their relationship
to the entity.
- Group Creditor Life Insurance: Life
insurance provided to debtors by a lending
institution to provide for the cancellation of
any outstanding debt should the borrower die.
Normally term insurance limited to the amount of
the loan.
- Group Insurance: Insurance written on
a number of people under a single master policy,
issued to their employer or to an association
with which they are affiliated.
- Group Life Insurance: Life insurance
usually without medical examination, on a group
of people under a master policy. It is typically
issued to an employer for the benefit of
employees, or to members of an association, for
example a professional membership group.
- Group Ordinary Life Insurance: Group
insurance plan providing life insurance for
employees. Traditional whole life policy is
split into decreasing insurance protection and
increasing cash values.
- Group Paid-Up Life Insurance:
Accumulating units of single premium whole life
insurance and decreasing term insurance, which
together equal the face amount of the policy.
Provided through a group life insurance plan.
- Group Permanent Plan: Type of pension
plan in which cash value life insurance is
issued on a group basis and cash values in each
policy are used to pay retirement benefits when
a worker retires.
- Group Term Life Insurance: Most
common form of group life insurance. Yearly
renewable term insurance on employees during
their working careers.
- Group Universal Life Products (GULP):
Universal life insurance plans sold to members
of a group, such as individual employees of an
employer. There are some differences between
GULP plans and individual universal life plans;
for instance, GULP expense charges generally are
lower than those assessed against individual
policies.
- Guaranteed Renewable: A contract that
the insured has the right to continue in force
by the timely payment of premiums (1) until at
least age 50 or (2) in the case of a policy
issued after age 44 for at least five years from
its date of issue, during which period the
insurer has no right to make unilaterally any
change in any provision of the contract while
the contract is in force, except that the
insurer may make changes in premium rate by
classes.
- Guaranteed Renewable Contract: A
contract that the insured person or entity has
the right to continue in force by the timely
payment of premiums for a substantial period of
time, during which period the insurer has no
right to make unilaterally any change in any
provision of the contract, while the contract is
in force, other than a change in the premium
rate for classes of policyholders.
- Guaranteed Renewable Contract: A
health policy which the company guarantees to
renew for life or until the insured reaches a
specified age, usually 65.
- Guaran
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