Structured Settlement –
Guaranteed Income for Those With Disabilities
Up until twenty years ago, anyone who
won a lawsuit as a result of a claim involving worker’s
compensation, wrongful death or accident had to accept a
lump sum payment as their compensation. The payment would
be intended to be invested, with the beneficiary living
off of the proceeds for as long as their recovery was expected
to take. In many cases, this type of settlement works fine,
but in other cases, the results are a disaster.
It is difficult enough for someone who
has been through the trauma of an accident or illness to
have to adjust to a new lifestyle without having to also
become an expert in the art of financial investing. If you
have been active all of your life and you suddenly find
yourself in a wheelchair and having to handle assets of
several hundred thousand dollars or more, you could be overwhelmed.
You could hire someone to handle the investments for you
as well as the tax issues, but what if the person you hired
wasn’t trustworthy? What if you hired a greedy relative
who took all of the money? What if you hired someone incompetent?
These problems and statistics that show
that people who receive large sums as compensation for accident,
injury, or wrongful death often spend all of their money
in a short period of time led to Congressional action in
1982 that amended the Federal tax code to allow for structured
settlements. A structured settlement is simply an agreement
between the responsible party and the injured party that
the payments will be made over time, rather than in a lump
sum. The two parties reach an agreement, the party responsible
for payment purchases an annuity, usually through an insurance
company, and the injured party will receive steady income
over a period of years or even a lifetime.
The payments are adjusted for inflation;
the sum of all of the payments will be greater than if the
amount had been paid as a lump sum. Because the payments
are purchased up front as an annuity, the paying party actually
pays less than the sum of the payments as well. The result
is generally a win-win situation, with the injured party
receiving a steady stream of income over as long a period
of time as necessary, while the paying party does not have
to worry about making monthly or annual payments.
While a structured settlement is
not the ideal payment arrangement in all situations where
a long term injury settlement occurs, it does work well
in many cases where a lump sum payout might be undesirable.
About The Author:
©Copyright 2005 by Retro Marketing.
Charles Essmeier is the owner of Retro Marketing, a firm
devoted to informational Websites, including http://www.StructuredSettlementHelp.com/
and http://www.HomeEquityHelp.net/
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