Estimating life insurance needs. Use Worksheet 8.1. Katie Holt is a 72-year-old widow who has recently been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. She has limited financial assets of her own and has been living with her daughter Laurie for two years. Her income is only850 a month in Social Security survivor’s benefits. Laurie wants to make sure her mother will be taken care of if Laurie should die. Laurie, 40, is single and earns55,000 a year as a human resources manager for a small manufacturing firm. She owns a condo with a current market value of100,000 and has a70,000 mortgage. Other debts include a5,000 auto loan and500 in various credit card balances. Her 401(k) plan has a current balance of24,500, and she keeps7,500 in a money market account for emergencies. After talking with her mother’s doctor, Laurie believes that her mother will be able to continue living independently for another two to three years. She estimates that her mother would need about2,000 a month to cover her living expenses and medical costs during this time. After that, Laurie’s mother will probably need nursing home care. Laurie calls several local nursing homes and finds that it will cost about5,000 a month when her mother enters a nursing home. Her mother’s doctor says it is difficult to estimate her mother’s life expectancy but indicates that with proper care some Alzheimer’s patients can live 10 or more years after diagnosis. Laurie also estimates that her personal final expenses would be around5,000, and she’d like to provide a25,000 contingency fund that would be used to pay a trusted friend to supervise her mother’s care if Laurie were no longer alive. Use Worksheet 8.1 to calculate Laurie’s total life insurance requirements and recommend the type of policy that she should buy.
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