E94 - The Three Types of Economic Death (And You Only Know One)
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_____________________________Hans goes back to the fundamentals, pulling from one of the rarest books in the IBC world: The Economics of Life Insurance by Solomon Huebner. Written roughly 80 years ago, this book laid the intellectual foundation for how life insurance should actually be understood, not as a death benefit waiting to pay out, but as income protection against every form of economic death a family can face.
Chapters:
00:00 - Opening segment
06:00 - Introducing Solomon Huebner and The Economics of Life Insurance
08:30 - Reframing the concept: life insurance is income insurance
11:00 - Economic Death #1: Physical death and the 1 in 3 statistic
18:00 - The fire insurance comparison: why the math should embarrass us all
22:00 - Economic Death #2: The living death and why disability is the most costly outcome
29:00 - The waiver of premium rider and why disability insurance matters more
35:00 - Economic Death #3: Retirement death and not becoming a burden on your children
41:00 - The moral obligation: Huebner's case for insuring your human life value
44:00 - Closing segment
Key Takeaways:
Most people only plan for one of the three ways their income can die. Huebner lays out three distinct forms of economic death: physical death, total and permanent disability, and retirement. Only one of them puts you in the ground. All three wipe out your income.
The fire insurance comparison should be uncomfortable. Half of American homes carry fire insurance against an event that, if it occurs, destroys roughly 10% of the property on average. Death is a 100% certain event that produces a 100% loss of income.
The 1 in 3 statistic reframes everything. At age 30, roughly one in three workers will not reach the standard retirement age of 65. If you would not board a plane that had a 1 in 3 chance of not landing, you should not leave your family's financial future unprotected against those same odds.
Disability is the most expensive form of economic death, not physical death. When you die, your income stops and so do your resource needs. When you become totally and permanently disabled, your income stops and your resource needs increase, often dramatically, over a long period of time.
The waiver of premium rider is the one financial asset that keeps feeding itself when you can't. If you become disabled and lose your income, contributions to your brokerage stop, your savings account stops growing, your real estate stops getting funded.
Not insuring your human life value is a moral failure, not just a financial one. Huebner's language is direct and Hans does not soften it. If you understand the risk and choose not to protect against it, the loss does not fall on you. It falls on your wife and your children.