Assignment in Insurance Policy | Meaning | Explanation | Types

Table of Contents

  • 1 What is Assignment in an Insurance Policy?
  • 2 Who can make an assignment?
  • 3 What happens to the ownership of the policy upon Assignment?
  • 4 Can assignment be changed or cancelled?
  • 5 What happens if the assignment dies?
  • 6 What is the procedure to make an assignment?
  • 7 Is it necessary to Inform the insurer about assignment?
  • 8 Can a policy be assigned to a minor person?
  • 9 Who pays premium when a policy is assigned?
  • 10.1 1. Conditional Assignment
  • 10.2 2. Absolute Assignment

What is Assignment in an Insurance Policy?

Assignment means a complete transfer of the ownership of the policy to some other person. Usually assignment is done for the purpose of raising a loan from a bank or a financial institution .

Assignment in Insurance Policy - Meaning, Explanation, Types

Assignment is governed by Section 38 of the Insurance Act 1938 in India. Assignment can also be done in favour of a close relative when the policyholder wishes to give a gift to that relative. Such an assignment is done for “natural love and affection”. An example, a policyholder may assign his policy to his sister who is handicapped.

Who can make an assignment?

A policyholder who has policy on his own life can assign the policy to another person. However, a person to whom a policy has been assigned can reassign the policy to the policyholder or assign it to any other person. A nominee cannot make an assignment of the policy. Similarly, an assignee cannot make a nomination on the policy which is assigned to him.

What happens to the ownership of the policy upon Assignment?

When a policyholder assign a policy, he loses all control on the policy. It is no longer his property. It is now the assignee’s property whether the policyholder is alive or dead, the assignee alone will get the policy money from the insurance company.

If the assignee dies, then his (assignee’s) legal heirs will be entitled to the policy money.

Can assignment be changed or cancelled?

An assignment cannot be changed or cancelled. The assignee can of course, reassign the policy to the policyholder who assigned it to him. He can also assign the policy to any other person because it is now his property. We can think of a bank reassigning the policy to the policyholder when their loan is repaid.

What happens if the assignment dies?

If the assignee dies, the assignment does not get cancelled. The legal heirs of the assignee become entitled to the policy money. Assignment is a legal transfer of all the interests the policyholder has in the policy to the assignee.

What is the procedure to make an assignment?

Assignment can be made only after issue of the policy bond. The policyholder can either write out the wording on the policy bond (endorsement) or write it on a separate paper and get it stamped. (Stamp value is the same, as the stamp required for the policy — Twenty paise per one thousand sum assured). When assignment is made by an endorsement on the policy bond, there is no need for stamp because the policy is already stamped.

Is it necessary to Inform the insurer about assignment?

Yes, it is necessary to give information about assignment to the insurance company. The insurer will register the assignment in its records and from then on recognize the assignee as the owner of the policy. If someone has made more than one assignment, then the date of the notice will decide which assignment has priority. In the case of reassignment also, notice is necessary.

Can a policy be assigned to a minor person?

Assignment can be made in favour of a minor person. But it would be advisable to appoint a guardian to receive the policy money if it becomes due during the minority of the assignee.

Who pays premium when a policy is assigned?

When a policy is assigned normally, the assignee should pay the premium, because the policy is now his property. In practice, however, premium is paid by the assignor (policyholder) himself. When a bank gives a loan and takes the assignment of a policy a security, it will ask the assignor himself to pay the premium and keep it in force. In the case of an assignment as a gift, the assignor would like to pay the premium because he has gifted the policy.

Types of assignment

Assignment may take two forms:

  • Conditional Assignment.
  • Absolute Assignment.

1. Conditional Assignment

It would be useful where the policyholder desires the benefit of the policy to go to a near relative in the event of his earlier death. It is usually effected for consideration of natural love and affection. It generally provides for the right to revert the policyholder in the event of the assignee predeceasing the policyholder or the policyholder surviving to the date of maturity.

2. Absolute Assignment

This assignment is generally made for valuable consideration. It has the effect of passing the title in the policy absolutely to the assignee and the policyholder in no way retains any interest in the policy. The absolute assignee can deal with the policy in any manner he likes and may assign or transfer his interest to another person.

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What Is a Life Insurance Assignment?

More articles.

  •   1. What Is the Collateral Assignment of a Life Insurance Policy?
  •   2. What Is the Assignment of Insurance Benefits?
  •   3. Absolute Assignment of Life Insurance Policies

Although the basic element of a life insurance policy is financial security protection in the event of a premature death, the variety of products available in the marketplace provides you with many financial planning options. A life insurance assignment is a document that allows you to transfer the ownership rights of your policy to a third party, transferring to that third party all rights of ownership under your policy, including the rights to make decisions regarding coverage, beneficiary and investment options. The two kinds of life insurance assignments are conditional and absolute.

Conditional Assignment

With a conditional assignment, although you transfer your life insurance policy’s ownership rights to another party, the assignment stipulates that if a certain specified event occurs, the assignment can be suspended or revoked in whole or in part. The event in question cannot be something that you can cause to happen. If you assigned your life insurance policy to a business partner, for example, with the explicit agreement that on the death of that business partner the assignment is revoked, that assignment is deemed conditional.

Absolute Assignment

When you make an absolute assignment, the rights, title and interest in the life insurance policy pass on to another party without the possibility of reversal. The assignment provides security to the assignee in that you can no longer make decisions regarding the policy that would jeopardize it, such as taking out a policy loan or withdrawing cash values.

Secured Loan

If you own a business, and you wish to take out a loan for your business, the lender may require you to purchase life insurance on your own life as security for the loan. Initially you make the request for the insurance. Once the policy is approved and issued, you make an assignment to the bank. The bank now controls the decisions and can make changes to the policy, including naming itself as beneficiary.

Collateral Loan

If you own a life insurance policy with cash values, you might wish to access those cash values to increase your income flow. Withdrawals from life insurance policy cash values can result in taxes due and might reduce your death benefit. An alternative is to assign the life insurance policy to a lender in exchange for a line of credit or regular loan payments. These loans are generally not taxable, and you can typically borrow up to a stated maximum percentage of the cash value. Since the policy is assigned to the bank, your failure to pay the premiums on the policy will cause the bank to call the loan, cancel the insurance policy and use the cash values as payment of the loan. If you maintain the policy in force until your death, the bank is generally the beneficiary of the tax-free policy proceeds up to and including the outstanding amount of the loan, with any remaining policy proceeds paid tax free to your named beneficiary.

  • AXA Life: Know Your Insurance

Philippe Lanctot started writing for business trade publications in 1990. He has contributed copy for the "Canadian Insurance Journal" and has been the co-author of text for life insurance company marketing guides. He holds a Bachelor of Science in mathematics from the University of Montreal with a minor in English.

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Azure Policy assignment structure

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Policy assignments are used by Azure Policy to define which resources are assigned which policies or initiatives. The policy assignment can determine the values of parameters for that group of resources at assignment time, making it possible to reuse policy definitions that address the same resource properties with different needs for compliance.

For more information on Azure Policy scope, see Understand scope in Azure Policy .

You use JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) to create a policy assignment. The policy assignment contains elements for:

  • display name
  • description
  • resource selectors
  • enforcement mode
  • excluded scopes
  • policy definition
  • non-compliance messages

For example, the following JSON shows a policy assignment in DoNotEnforce mode with dynamic parameters:

All Azure Policy samples are at Azure Policy samples .

Display name and description

You use displayName and description to identify the policy assignment and provide context for its use with the specific set of resources. displayName has a maximum length of 128 characters and description a maximum length of 512 characters.

The optional metadata property stores information about the policy assignment. Customers can define any properties and values useful to their organization in metadata . However, there are some common properties used by Azure Policy. Each metadata property has a limit of 1,024 characters.

Common metadata properties

assignedBy (string): The friendly name of the security principal that created the assignment.

createdBy (string): The GUID of the security principal that created the assignment.

createdOn (string): The Universal ISO 8601 DateTime format of the assignment creation time.

parameterScopes (object): A collection of key-value pairs where the key matches a strongType configured parameter name and the value defines the resource scope used in Portal to provide the list of available resources by matching strongType . Portal sets this value if the scope is different than the assignment scope. If set, an edit of the policy assignment in Portal automatically sets the scope for the parameter to this value. However, the scope isn't locked to the value and it can be changed to another scope.

The following example of parameterScopes is for a strongType parameter named backupPolicyId that sets a scope for resource selection when the assignment is edited in the Portal.

updatedBy (string): The friendly name of the security principal that updated the assignment, if any.

updatedOn (string): The Universal ISO 8601 DateTime format of the assignment update time, if any.

evidenceStorages (object): The recommended default storage account that should be used to hold evidence for attestations to policy assignments with a manual effect. The displayName property is the name of the storage account. The evidenceStorageAccountID property is the resource ID of the storage account. The evidenceBlobContainer property is the blob container name in which you plan to store the evidence.

Resource selectors

The optional resourceSelectors property facilitates safe deployment practices (SDP) by enabling you to gradually roll out policy assignments based on factors like resource location, resource type, or whether a resource has a location. When resource selectors are used, Azure Policy will only evaluate resources that are applicable to the specifications made in the resource selectors. Resource selectors can also be used to narrow down the scope of exemptions in the same way.

In the following example scenario, the new policy assignment is evaluated only if the resource's location is either East US or West US .

When you're ready to expand the evaluation scope for your policy, you just have to modify the assignment. The following example shows our policy assignment with two more Azure regions added to the SDPRegions selector. Note, in this example, SDP means to Safe Deployment Practice :

Resource selectors have the following properties:

name : The name of the resource selector.

selectors : (Optional) The property used to determine which subset of resources applicable to the policy assignment should be evaluated for compliance.

kind : The property of a selector that describes which characteristic narrows down the set of evaluated resources. Each kind can only be used once in a single resource selector. Allowed values are:

resourceLocation : This property is used to select resources based on their type. Can't be used in the same resource selector as resourceWithoutLocation .

resourceType : This property is used to select resources based on their type.

resourceWithoutLocation : This property is used to select resources at the subscription level that don't have a location. Currently only supports subscriptionLevelResources . Can't be used in the same resource selector as resourceLocation .

in : The list of allowed values for the specified kind . Can't be used with notIn . Can contain up to 50 values.

notIn : The list of not-allowed values for the specified kind . Can't be used with in . Can contain up to 50 values.

A resource selector can contain multiple selectors . To be applicable to a resource selector, a resource must meet requirements specified by all its selectors. Further, up to 10 resource selectors can be specified in a single assignment. In-scope resources are evaluated when they satisfy any one of these resource selectors.

The optional overrides property allows you to change the effect of a policy definition without modifying the underlying policy definition or using a parameterized effect in the policy definition.

The most common use case for overrides is policy initiatives with a large number of associated policy definitions. In this situation, managing multiple policy effects can consume significant administrative effort, especially when the effect needs to be updated from time to time. Overrides can be used to simultaneously update the effects of multiple policy definitions within an initiative.

Let's take a look at an example. Imagine you have a policy initiative named CostManagement that includes a custom policy definition with policyDefinitionReferenceId corpVMSizePolicy and a single effect of audit . Suppose you want to assign the CostManagement initiative, but don't yet want to see compliance reported for this policy. This policy's 'audit' effect can be replaced by 'disabled' through an override on the initiative assignment, as shown in the following sample:

Overrides have the following properties:

kind : The property the assignment will override. The supported kind is policyEffect .

value : The new value that overrides the existing value. The supported values are effects .

selectors : (Optional) The property used to determine what scope of the policy assignment should take on the override.

kind : The property of a selector that describes what characteristic will narrow down the scope of the override. Allowed value for kind: policyEffect is:

  • policyDefinitionReferenceId : This specifies which policy definitions within an initiative assignment should take on the effect override.

Note that one override can be used to replace the effect of many policies by specifying multiple values in the policyDefinitionReferenceId array. A single override can be used for up to 50 policyDefinitionReferenceIds, and a single policy assignment can contain up to 10 overrides, evaluated in the order in which they're specified. Before the assignment is created, the effect chosen in the override is validated against the policy rule and parameter allowed value list (in cases where the effect is parameterized ).

Enforcement mode

The enforcementMode property provides customers the ability to test the outcome of a policy on existing resources without initiating the policy effect or triggering entries in the Azure Activity log .

This scenario is commonly referred to as "What If" and aligns to safe deployment practices. enforcementMode is different from the Disabled effect, as that effect prevents resource evaluation from happening at all.

This property has the following values:

If enforcementMode isn't specified in a policy or initiative definition, the value Default is used. Remediation tasks can be started for deployIfNotExists policies, even when enforcementMode is set to DoNotEnforce .

Excluded scopes

The scope of the assignment includes all child resource containers and child resources. If a child resource container or child resource shouldn't have the definition applied, each can be excluded from evaluation by setting notScopes . This property is an array to enable excluding one or more resource containers or resources from evaluation. notScopes can be added or updated after creation of the initial assignment.

An excluded resource is different from an exempted resource. For more information, see Understand scope in Azure Policy .

Policy definition ID

This field must be the full path name of either a policy definition or an initiative definition. policyDefinitionId is a string and not an array. The latest content of the assigned policy definition or initiative is retrieved each time the policy assignment is evaluated. It's recommended that if multiple policies are often assigned together, to use an initiative instead.

Non-compliance messages

To set a custom message that describes why a resource is non-compliant with the policy or initiative definition, set nonComplianceMessages in the assignment definition. This node is an array of message entries. This custom message is in addition to the default error message for non-compliance and is optional.

Custom messages for non-compliance are only supported on definitions or initiatives with Resource Manager modes definitions.

If the assignment is for an initiative, different messages can be configured for each policy definition in the initiative. The messages use the policyDefinitionReferenceId value configured in the initiative definition. For details, see policy definitions properties .

This segment of the policy assignment provides the values for the parameters defined in the policy definition or initiative definition . This design makes it possible to reuse a policy or initiative definition with different resources, but check for different business values or outcomes.

In this example, the parameters previously defined in the policy definition are prefix and suffix . This particular policy assignment sets prefix to DeptA and suffix to -LC . The same policy definition is reusable with a different set of parameters for a different department, reducing the duplication and complexity of policy definitions while providing flexibility.

For policy assignments with effect set to deployIfNotExist or modify , it's required to have an identity property to do remediation on non-compliant resources. When using identity, the user must also specify a location for the assignment.

A single policy assignment can be associated with only one system- or user-assigned managed identity. However, that identity can be assigned more than one role if necessary.

  • Learn about the policy definition structure .
  • Understand how to programmatically create policies .
  • Learn how to get compliance data .
  • Learn how to remediate non-compliant resources .
  • Review what a management group is with Organize your resources with Azure management groups .

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  • Life Insurance
  • Definitions

What Is a Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance?

what is assignment of policy

Charlene Rhinehart is a CPA , CFE, chair of an Illinois CPA Society committee, and has a degree in accounting and finance from DePaul University.

what is assignment of policy

A collateral assignment of life insurance is a conditional assignment appointing a lender as an assignee of a policy. Essentially, the lender has a claim to some or all of the death benefit until the loan is repaid. The death benefit is used as collateral for a loan.

The advantage to using a collateral assignee over naming the lender as a beneficiary is that you can specify that the lender is only entitled to a certain amount, namely the amount of the outstanding loan. That would allow your beneficiaries still be entitled to any remaining death benefit.

Lenders commonly require that life insurance serve as collateral for a business loan to guarantee repayment if the borrower dies or defaults. They may even require you to get a life insurance policy to be approved for a business loan.

Key Takeaways

  • The borrower of a business loan using life insurance as collateral must be the policy owner, who may or may not be the insured.
  • The collateral assignment helps you avoid naming a lender as a beneficiary.
  • The collateral assignment may be against all or part of the policy's value.
  • If any amount of the death benefit remains after the lender is paid, it is distributed to beneficiaries.
  • Once the loan is fully repaid, the life insurance policy is no longer used as collateral.

How a Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance Works

Collateral assignments make sure the lender gets paid only what they are due. The borrower must be the owner of the policy, but they do not have to be the insured person. And the policy must remain current for the life of the loan, with the policy owner continuing to pay all premiums . You can use either term or whole life insurance policy as collateral, but the death benefit must meet the lender's terms.

A permanent life insurance policy with a cash value allows the lender access to the cash value to use as loan payment if the borrower defaults. Many lenders don't accept term life insurance policies as collateral because they do not accumulate cash value.

Alternately, the policy owner's access to the cash value is restricted to protect the collateral. If the loan is repaid before the borrower's death, the assignment is removed, and the lender is no longer the beneficiary of the death benefit.

Insurance companies must be notified of the collateral assignment of a policy. However, other than their obligation to meet the terms of the contract, they are not involved in the agreement.

Example of Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance

For example, say you have a business plan for a floral shop and need a $50,000 loan to get started. When you apply for the loan, the bank says you must have collateral in the form of a life insurance policy to back it up. You have a whole life insurance policy with a cash value of $65,000 and a death benefit of $300,000, which the bank accepts as collateral.

So, you then designate the bank as the policy's assignee until you repay the $50,000 loan. That way, the bank can ensure it will be repaid the funds it lent you, even if you died. In this case, because the cash value and death benefit is more than what you owe the lender, your beneficiaries would still inherit money.

Alternatives to Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance

Using a collateral assignment to secure a business loan can help you access the funds you need to start or grow your business. However, you would be at risk of losing your life insurance policy if you defaulted on the loan, meaning your beneficiaries may not receive the money you'd planned for them to inherit.

Consult with a financial advisor to discuss whether a collateral assignment or one of these alternatives may be most appropriate for your financial situation.

Life insurance loan (policy loan) : If you already have a life insurance policy with a cash value, you can likely borrow against it. Policy loans are not taxed and have less stringent requirements such as no credit or income checks. However, this option would not work if you do not already have a permanent life insurance policy because the cash value component takes time to build.

Surrendering your policy : You can also surrender your policy to access any cash value you've built up. However, your beneficiaries would no longer receive a death benefit.

Other loan types : Finally, you can apply for other loans, such as a personal loan, that do not require life insurance as collateral. You could use loans that rely on other types of collateral, such as a home equity loan that uses your home equity.

What Are the Benefits of Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance?

A collateral assignment of a life insurance policy may be required if you need a business loan. Lenders typically require life insurance as collateral for business loans because they guarantee repayment if the borrower dies. A policy with cash value can guarantee repayment if the borrower defaults.

What Kind of Life Insurance Can Be Used for Collateral?

You can typically use any type of life insurance policy as collateral for a business loan, depending on the lender's requirements. A permanent life insurance policy with a cash value allows the lender a source of funds to use if the borrower defaults. Some lenders may not accept term life insurance policies, which have no cash value. The lender will typically require the death benefit be a certain amount, depending on your loan size.

Is Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance Irrevocable?

A collateral assignment of life insurance is irrevocable. So, the policyholder may not use the cash value of a life insurance policy dedicated toward collateral for a loan until that loan has been repaid.

What is the Difference Between an Assignment and a Collateral Assignment?

With an absolute assignment , the entire ownership of the policy would be transferred to the assignee, or the lender. Then, the lender would be entitled to the full death benefit. With a collateral assignment, the lender is only entitled to the balance of the outstanding loan.

The Bottom Line

If you are applying for life insurance to secure your own business loan, remember you do not need to make the lender the beneficiary. Instead you can use a collateral assignment. Consult a financial advisor or insurance broker who can walk you through the process and explain its pros and cons as they apply to your situation.

Progressive. " Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance ."

Fidelity Life. " What Is a Collateral Assignment of a Life Insurance Policy? "

Kansas Legislative Research Department. " Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance Proceeds ."

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How to Write a Policy Assignment

What is a policy assignment, policy critique.

  • Policy Brief/Briefing Note

Reading and Analyzing Policy

Writing policy assignments, research and writing process.

Understanding, evaluating, and writing policy documents are important competencies to develop as undergraduate students in a wide range of fields, spanning from Health Care to Environmental Science to Education. Policy is informed by strong research and accurate evidence, often compiled and presented by government and non-governmental organizations. Public policies include formal legislation, official plans, and regulations created by various levels of government. Each of these can act as guiding principles for governmental decision making and program delivery. Non-governmental and para-governmental organizations publish policy briefs, commission reports, and fact sheets to inform policy makers and recommend policy change.

Course instructors often ask students to analyze policy documents to better understand issues and policy alternatives, and students in many disciplines must write policy documents, including critiques and briefs or briefing notes. This guide offers steps to reading policy and keys for effective policy writing.

Types of Policy Assignments

In a policy critique, students are expected to read and critically analyze one or more policy documents that address a common issue. The goal of this assignment is to present an overall assessment of current or proposed policies and their efficacy or potential considering both scholarly theory and real-world, practical application with consideration of environmental, social, or economic contexts.

Proposed structure

  • Issue: what is the policy in question?
  • Background: where did it emerge? What problem does it try to address?
  • Application: so far, based on evidence, how effective has it been?
  • Limits: what are limits with the policy? How has it been adapted? What questions remain?
  • Evaluation/potential: based on concepts and theories from course materials, what is the potential for this policy to address particular issue/problem?

Policy Brief (Briefing Note)

Policy briefs or briefing notes are documents written by governmental and non-governmental organizations to propose evidence-based policy solutions to a well-defined social, environmental, or economic issue. Briefs present findings from academic and grey literature to demonstrate the scope of an issue and to analyze its context and background. The brief is organized with clear headings and short sections, which are supported by figures or tables.

  • Executive Summary: similar to an abstract, briefly explains the goal, findings, and recommendations. Although it is placed first in the document, it is written last.
  • Issue Definition: identify and explain the key issue and its scope and significance.
  • Policy Background: synthesize evidence to explain the context of the issue – its origins, key stakeholders, overlapping issues, and potential barriers – and any existing policy.
  • Best Practices: describe relevant policies from other jurisdictions and introduce specific examples of policy and best practices that reinforce the argument your briefing note presents.
  • Policy Options: synthesize your research to present a few policy options; for each option, describe the approach and present advantages, challenges, and potential barriers. Present one policy recommendation from these options.
  • References: divide references into sections (e.g., academic sources, grey literature, policy documents etc.)

Each policy document is focused on a specific issue and establishes particular goals; when you read any policy document, you are working to understand and analyze the issue and how the policy addresses the issue. These messages are often presented in different ways. Policy briefs are, well, brief, but other policy documents or commissioned reports can be quite lengthy, so it is important to develop a reading strategy for each new document. Generally, it is best to follow this process: preview, plan, read and take notes, and assess within course context.

Because policy documents vary significantly in form and purpose, it is essential to preview the document prior to reading it: identify its author, its purpose, and its form. Take time to read the executive summary, which presents a short explanation of the issue and purpose of the document. Understand its authorship and the interests of the individual or organizational author.

Make a plan

Identify your goal in reading the document: do you wish to better understand the issue, to identify policy alternatives, to appreciate broader context, or to determine efficacy of policy? How will this document inform your understanding of the issue you are studying? What sections will be most useful or relevant?

Read and take notes

Your preview and plan can direct your reading and notetaking. Read closely to understand the policy or issue, its context, and the evidence used to support it. Identify stakeholders and their interests, the goals of the policy and how those goals are measurable and actionable. You may find it helpful to refer to the table of contents or index (or to use the ‘find’ tool in your browser) to seek out sections that contain relevant keywords in documents spanning more than 100 pages.

Assess policy within course context

Refer to theories, frameworks, and indices that you have discussed in class to assess a policy. Consider whether it follows a particular conceptual framework or achieves particular numerical targets. Compare it to other policies in similar contexts and analyze its parts to assess its adaptability to different contexts. Evaluate its fit to the specific issue and its relevance for various stakeholder needs or values.

Reading an Official Plan

An official plan is often a lengthy document that covers many topics and issues within a set of overarching goals for an organization, like a university, hospital, or municipality. Your aim should be to understand the overarching goals of the plan and its broader context, which are likely laid out in the executive summary and introductory sections. Then you may need to seek out references to a particular topic, issue, or stakeholder; the index, table of contents, or “find” tool can be helpful for this.

Reading a Policy Brief

The goal of a policy brief is to inform and persuade policy makers, so your aim should be to understand the issue the brief identifies and to analyze the policy it proposes. The structure and design of the policy brief will guide your reading. Take time to understand the context of the issue and the policy: who are the stakeholders, what are the goals, what is the process, and what are the barriers? Analyze the policy within the disciplinary concepts you’re learning in class; how does the policy fit particular frameworks, theories, or indices you’ve discussed? What is unique about this policy? How can this policy be adapted to different contexts? What is its potential to address the issue?

Successful policy assignments are focused, well-researched, analytical, organized, and concise. Therefore, it is important to take time to define the issue, understand the context of the issue, and seek out policy alternatives prior to identifying a recommended course of action.

  • Focused Issue
  • Using Research
  • Demonstrating Analysis
  • Organized, Concise, and Clear Writing

Focused issue

It is essential that you present a focused and clear issue, and that issue must be at the scale of policy action. For example, policy briefs can address ER wait times or agricultural pesticide use, but issues such as access to health care or the sustainability of food production are too complex for you to address in a short policy assignment. Often, course material and core concepts provide useful direction for you to narrow your issue.

In policy assignments, an issue is clearly defined and contextualized with evidence from scholarly and grey literature. It is important for you to explain how scholars, governments, or NGOs have discussed the issue, and numerical data or figures can demonstrate the scale of an issue or its projected trajectory. Provide details about the issue in its context: be specific about place, time, and stakeholders, and acknowledge any overlapping economic, environmental, or social issues.

Example: Effective issue definition 1

Age-friendly municipalities foster solidarity among generations within communities and reach out to older people at risk of isolation by making them feel socially included and involved (WHO, 2007). It is well documented that these trends are happening across Canada, and evidence suggests that local governments have a key role in enabling older people to live longer. It is unclear to what degree Aurora’s municipal government is prepared to support its expanding ageing population. It is essential to continue to examine new approaches to housing and transportation infrastructure within Aurora in order to improve public policy matters in regards to their ageing population.

  • Issue is grounded by focused concept and evidence; writer demonstrates value of municipal policy to address the issue
  • Writer precisely identifies the issue to be discussed in brief and the goals of the report

Example: Ineffective issue definition 1

In addition to the infrastructure issue in Peterborough, there is also an issue regarding how spread out the community is. The city is too big for residents to be able to walk the entire city. Amenities are also very spread out; it is unlikely that pedestrians would be able to access the required amenities within walking distance from their house. Ultimately, the main issues surrounding the walkability in the City of Peterborough are the lack of infrastructure and maintenance, as well as the lack of available activities near to peoples’ residences.

  • Not grounded in conceptual framework or theory; writer needs to explain why walkability is an issue that a municipality should address
  • Lack of precision or evidence to support claims about the size of the city or accessibility to amenities

Using research

Policy is informed by evidence from scholarly literature, government data, and research by various stakeholder organizations. Effective policy assignments synthesize evidence from academic and grey literature to create an accurate account of the issue and policy options. Common forms of evidence in policy writing include numerical and financial data, figures such as graphs and maps, excerpts from existing policies, recommendations from NGOs, and conceptual frameworks.

In policy writing, your goal is to present research both accurately and accessibly, as decision-makers in government and business may not be familiar with terminology or concepts presented by scholars. Make efforts to paraphrase the evidence you use and be sure to include citations in the form requested by your professor (footnotes or author-date systems are common).

One of the key factors in Municipal Cultural Planning is increasing cross-sectoral strategies by building new partnerships “…between the municipality and its community and business partners” (Municipal Cultural Plan, toolkit, 2011, p.21) for long term sustainability. Therefore, municipal cultural planning “…does not look at policy sectorally” (Gollmitzer, 2008, p.18), but instead strengthens and integrates “…cultural resources across all facets of government planning and decision making” (Municipal Cultural Plan Toolkit, 2011, p.21). Building new networks are supported by leveraging the sense of place within a community. Adopting a place-based planning approach allows “…government, community organizations and citizens to explore, measure and asses the values, resources and assets of the community” (Huhtala, 2016, p.66), in order to leverage them for economic prosperity.

  • Writer synthesizes academic and grey literature to demonstrate how concepts are applied in policy.
  • Writer also demonstrates analysis of evidence and its relevance to the brief’s focused issue.
  • Use of direct quotation can feature the language of a policy if the writer wishes to analyze discourse; however, this excerpt relies too heavily on direct quotation, and it would be stronger if this evidence was paraphrased.

Demonstrating analysis

The quality of your policy assignment is closely tied to your analysis of the issue and the policy options you present. It is important to evaluate policy options as you research and to critically analyze how those options address the issue within its particular context. Take time to examine specific factors and parties involved in an issue and consider how these factors may facilitate or challenge each policy option; furthermore, you should also assess the advantages and disadvantages of each policy option and its impacts on these factors or parties.

You may find it valuable to consider theories, concepts, or frameworks from your course to develop your argument and to establish coherence throughout your assignment. If you assess all policy options through the same critical lens or theory, then your message will be clear and consistent throughout your document.

Integrating senior housing into the fabric of the inner core communities could make housing developments viable and situate seniors in settings where they can access these services by foot or nearby transit (Fang, 2013).  This concept can allow seniors, who may be considering downsizing, to remain within their community where they can keep active, live within easy access to medical and community services, and stay close to their support network that they have spent their lives establishing. However, the growing demand for these developments could put major pressure on the municipality.  City officials would have to amend current zoning by-laws to allow commercial and residential uses to be a part of mixed-use development and appropriate provisions need to be provided to ensure compatibility and to minimize potential negative impacts. 

  • Writer presents both advantages and challenges of policy option within common concept of healthy aging communities.
  • Writer also includes potential impacts and barriers of policy option, which demonstrates their consideration of the issue and its context.

Organized, concise, and clear writing

Policy writing should be well-organized and easy to follow. Use headings and subheadings to create structure and to support your reader. It is common to number sections and subsections to further clarify the order of your ideas. In addition, good paragraph structure also supports organization and clarity, so we encourage you to use specific topic sentences to introduce the main idea of a paragraph.

Well-written policy assignments employ a formal writing style and use third-person voice (e.g., they) rather than first-person (e.g., I, we) or second-person (e.g., you) voice. Further, they avoid jargon, but use specific and clear language. When you revise your draft, take time to consider each sentence and remove repetitive or redundant phrases and words.

Finally, it is important to pay attention to the details. Label any figures or tables in your document; make reference to these figures or tables in the text of your work (e.g., see Figure 1). Also be sure to follow assignment instructions for referencing evidence in your text (e.g., footnotes or author-date system) and in your list of sources, which is often categorized by type of source (e.g., academic, government, NGOs).

There are many ways to approach a policy assignment, but it is important to take time to research and analyze issues and policy options thoroughly prior to writing. Consider the following steps to complete your policy assignment:

  • Read assignment instructions closely
  • Preliminary research: review course materials, brainstorm, conduct environmental scan or site visit, consider current issues relevant to course concepts
  • Define issue: consider questions and frameworks
  • Research issue and context
  • Research and evaluate policy alternatives in other places
  • Analyze policy alternatives and consider fit for current issue and context; select policy options to present
  • Outline sections: what evidence goes where? How does evidence work together?
  • Write sections (leave Executive Summary until last)
  • Revise for organization, analysis, and use of evidence. See Strategies for Revision and Proofreading.
  • Edit for clarity, concision, and grammar
  • Complete final proof of document
  • These examples are not to be reproduced in whole or part. Use of the ideas or words in this example is an act of plagiarism, which is subject to academic integrity policy at Trent University and other academic institutions.

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What Is Assignment in Life Insurance Policy?

assignment in life insurance policy

While purchasing a life insurance plan, you might encounter several unfamiliar terms, which can make this process even harder to follow. However, understanding these terms and their functions is essential to make an error-free decision while handling your policy.

Assignment is one such necessary process associated with life insurance, dealing with the transfer of ownership of your policy. It is often confused with a nomination, which refers to naming beneficiaries of your contract. Therefore, you must understand the aspects of assignment in a life insurance policy.

What Is Assignment and Assignee in Life Insurance Policy?

Assignment refers to the process of transferring your privileges as a policyholder to another person or entity such as the bank. Once the ownership is transferred, the former policyholder will have no further authority over it. You can assign your policy for various reasons, for instance to someone you love or to your bank in case you owe debt repayment.

Two other terms related to the assignment process are – assignor and assignee.

Assignor: An assignor is the one who is transferring their policy rights to someone else.

Assignee: An assignee is a person or an institution that receives the policy rights and now has complete control over it.

In many cases where people assign their policies to the bank, they remain the life insured, whereas the bank receives the claim benefit after their demise.

What Are the Types of Assignment in Life Insurance Policy?

Absolute assignment.

In an absolute assignment, you can transfer your life insurance policy ownership to another being without any terms and conditions. Here, the assignor can sign over the entire policy as a gift to their loved ones or if they owe an outstanding debt.

After the transfer procedure is complete, the assignee will be responsible for all policy-related decisions, including paying the outstanding premiums and designating nominees.

For Example,

Suppose you have purchased a ULIP plan to secure your family after you pass away. Now, within a few years, you are in need of urgent financing to support your child’s education.

So, instead of surrendering your policy, you can use it as collateral to seek help from someone. Now you have assigned your insurance plan to a friend (assignee) through an absolute assignment by which your friend can take over all the rights of your policy including paying future premiums.

Conditional Assignment

Condition assignment is a policy where you transfer the life insurance policy rights to an assignee under specific terms and conditions. Therefore, the transfer will only be valid if those conditions are met.

Furthermore, it can also be a temporary transfer, where the policy is transferred back to the assignor once they fulfil the predetermined conditions.

The transfer takes place through a form that mentions the reason and condition of the assignment along with an assigned percentage of the sum assured and who will pay the future premiums.

For Example:

Suppose you have assigned your life insurance policy under conditional assignment to a bank for which you secured a loan. If you repay the loan within the set time, the bank will transfer the policy rights back to you. However, if you fail to repay the EMIs, the bank can surrender your policy and get their money back.

An assignment is a legal process through which policy ownership transfers from an assignor to an assignee. It can be beneficial under multiple circumstances, especially in a financial emergency. Therefore, before you buy a life insurance plan, understand these features since they can help you in the future.

In addition, the assignment of a life insurance policy can also be used as a present to your loved ones. While nomination is where you directly assign beneficiaries to ensure that your loved ones are protected in your absence.

FAQs about Assignment in Life Insurance Policy:

Does the policy risk get transferred in the assignment process, what is an endorsement in an assignment, what are the liabilities and rights of the assignee, other important features of life insurance.

  • This is an informative article provided on 'as is' basis for awareness purpose only and not intended as a professional advice. The content of the article is derived from various open sources across the Internet. Digit Life Insurance is not promoting or recommending any aspect in the article or its correctness. Please verify the information and your requirement before taking any decisions.
  • All the figures reflected in the article are for illustrative purposes. The premium for Coverage that one buys depends on various factors including customer requirements, eligibility, age, demography, insurance provider, product, coverage amount, term and other factors
  • Tax Benefits, if applicable depend on the Tax Regime opted by the individual and the applicable tax provision. Please consult your Tax consultant before making any decision.
  • Digit Insurance
  • ']" itemprop="itemListElement" itemscope itemtype="http://schema.org/ListItem"> Life Insurance
  • ']" itemprop="itemListElement" itemscope itemtype="http://schema.org/ListItem"> Features
  • ']" itemprop="itemListElement" itemscope itemtype="http://schema.org/ListItem"> Assignment in Life Insurance Policy

Last updated: 2024-03-28

Assignment of insurance policies and claims | Practical Law

what is assignment of policy

Assignment of insurance policies and claims

Practical law uk practice note w-031-6021  (approx. 19 pages).

Policygenius does not allow the submission of personal information by users located within the EU or the UK. If you believe this action is in error, or have any questions, please contact us at [email protected]

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All you need to know about assigning life insurance policy.

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The insured needs to either endorse the policy document or make a deed of assignment and register the same with the insurer.

insure

  • Conditional assignment: This is done when the insured wishes to pass benefits of the policy to a relative in case of early death or certain conditions. The rights of the policyholder are restored once the conditions are fulfilled.
  • Absolute assignment: This is done as a part of consideration for a loan in favour of the lender/bank/lending institution. In such an assignment, the insured loses his rights in the policy and the absolute assignee can deal with it independently.
  • Proof of income.
  • Self attested copy of photo ID and address proof .
  • Self attested copy of PAN card.

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IMAGES

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  6. Model Format Of Notice Of Assignment Of Life Insurance Policy

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COMMENTS

  1. Assignment in Insurance Policy | Meaning | Explanation | Types

    Assignment may take two forms: Conditional Assignment. Absolute Assignment. 1. Conditional Assignment. It would be useful where the policyholder desires the benefit of the policy to go to a near relative in the event of his earlier death. It is usually effected for consideration of natural love and affection. It generally provides for the right ...

  2. What Is a Life Insurance Assignment? | Finance - Zacks

    A life insurance assignment is a document that allows you to transfer the ownership rights of your policy to a third party, transferring to that third party all rights of ownership under your ...

  3. What is a collateral assignment of a life insurance policy?

    Collateral assignment of life insurance lets you use a life insurance policy as an asset to secure a loan. If you die while the policy is in place and still owe money on the loan, the death benefit goes to pay off the remaining debt.

  4. Details of the policy assignment structure - Azure Policy

    This segment of the policy assignment provides the values for the parameters defined in the policy definition or initiative definition. This design makes it possible to reuse a policy or initiative definition with different resources, but check for different business values or outcomes. "prefix": {. "value": "DeptA".

  5. A Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance - Investopedia

    A collateral assignment of life insurance is a conditional assignment appointing a lender as an assignee of a policy. Essentially, the lender has a claim to some or all of the death benefit until ...

  6. How to Write a Policy Assignment - Academic Skills - Trent ...

    There are many ways to approach a policy assignment, but it is important to take time to research and analyze issues and policy options thoroughly prior to writing. Consider the following steps to complete your policy assignment: Read assignment instructions closely. Preliminary research: review course materials, brainstorm, conduct ...

  7. Understanding What is Assignment in Life Insurance Policy

    An assignment is a legal process through which policy ownership transfers from an assignor to an assignee. It can be beneficial under multiple circumstances, especially in a financial emergency. Therefore, before you buy a life insurance plan, understand these features since they can help you in the future. In addition, the assignment of a life ...

  8. Assignment of insurance policies and claims | Practical Law

    Assignment of insurance policies and claims. An overview of the legal principles that apply when assigning an insurance policy or the right to receive the insurance monies due under the policy to a third party. It considers the requirements that must be met for the assignment to be valid and explains the difference between assignment, co ...

  9. What Is Collateral Assignment of Life Insurance? - Policygenius

    Collateral assignment of life insurance is an arrangement where you agree to give a lender the first claim to the payout from your life insurance policy. This allows your life insurance to serve as the collateral that many loans — especially small business loans or Small Business Administration (SBA) loans — require before they can lend you money you need.

  10. All you need to know about assigning life insurance policy

    Notice of assignment The insured needs to either endorse the policy document or make a deed of assignment and register the same with the insurer. A form prescribed by the insurers must be filled and signed. In case of conditional assignment, reason also needs to be mentioned. Documents needed. Proof of income.