19 FebIs it wise to opt for the maximum deductible?

Lets start off with a simple explanation of how insurance works. In the good old days before those kind men got together in the Lloyds coffee shop, people were responsible for their own losses. If the horse pulled their cart into a ditch and this broke the wheel, the owner had to put his hands into his pock’ets (which fortunately had already been invented) and pay someone to repair the wheel. But once people could share the risks, life was suddenly better. If you gather together a big enough group of cart owners, each will only have to pay a small amount into the central fund to cover the losses of the few who have accidents. Those men at Lloyds were on to a winning business formula. Moving into modern times, the idea of spreading the risk is the same and, with thousands of people in each group, the cost of loss is divided into small premiums. But, with profits under pressure, the insurance companies came up with a new variation on the old theme. Suppose they could persuade their customers to accept the risk of some of their losses. This would then become self-insurance for part of the risk. The rest would be paid by the insurance companies. So the deductible was born. You agree to pay the first portion of any loss. In the case of traffic accidents, most of the fender benders are minor and don’t cost much to repair. That means you pay for most of the repairs yourself and the insurance companies get richer. Ironically, if no-one opted for the deductible, the increase in the premium for everyone in the group would be trivial.

So let’s get to an actual example to see how it works. If you agree to accept a deductible of $1,000, you will be given a discount on the premium. Say you save 10% over the year. Now that’s a good saving if you manage to get through the year without having an accident. But suppose your luck is not good and you have an accident. The bill for repairs is $900. You put your hand in your pocket (pockets are such useful things – always seeming to have money in them) and pull out the dollars. Was your 10% saving over the year more than $900? If not, you are making a loss, not just on the insurance policy but, if you had to use your credit card, on the interest added to the $900 until it is paid off. What would happen if your run of bad luck continued and you had a second accident in the year? Do you have another $1,000 as savings or available to borrow? Perhaps we should not be so pessimistic. Worst case scenarios are always better applied to other people and never to you.

The higher the deductible you accept, the more of the risk you are accepting. Cheap car insurance is a wonderful thing to have so long as your luck holds up. But if your luck fails, the maximum deductible is going to empty that magic pocket of yours. And here’s the thing – you can be the safest driver in the world, always super careful, always following all the rules, and then you meet a dork behind the wheel of another vehicle and suddenly you’re wrapped round a tree. So look for cheap auto insurance, but always look at your cash position and ask yourself how well you would cope if the worst happened. Deductibles are good for people with a margin of financial safety.

03 DecDon’t Be Embarrassed About Haggling With Vendors And Creditors

Negotiating with creditors

gh you have the perfect right to haggle and negotiate before handing over your hard earned cash, most people will tell you that they don’t or can’t do it, because they feel embarrassed and almost ashamed to ask for a better deal.

In general, men find it harder to haggle than women and the reason is partly upbringing and partly cultural, and if you’ve visited the far east, middle east, Mexico or south America then you’ll have noticed that negotiating a price is normal, and if you don’t do it then you’ll most likely be considered stupid, and even worse, you’ll spoil the fun that the dealer would have got from haggling.

There is a well known story in Mexico which goes, “How do you make a shopkeeper mad in Mexico?”, and the answer is, “you enter the shop and ask how much something costs. The store keeper tells you $155 and you pay him the $155 and leave. The storekeeper slaps his thigh and asks himself angrily why he didn’t ask for $199″.

Let’s be clear that I’m not talking about negotiating in a coffee shop, or your local supermarket, but you can definitely negotiate a better price in more places than you’d probably imagine, and you’d be really silly to buy expensive jewelry, or a car at the asking price, and you might well be able to lower the price of even things like dental work if you just push a little.

The First Truism

a) Something is worth what somebody is willing to pay for it.

If a quick example would help you better understand this, then you need look further than at what happened to the prices of real estate in the U.S. over the last year or so. Folks purchased homes at highly inflated prices and lenders approved mortgages believing that prices just had to keep going up. They went down because people wouldn’t pay the prices.

The Second Truism

You have the right to ask for a better price, an extended warranty at no extra cost, or a first-time-customer discount etc. and the seller has the right to refuse. There is nothing shameful about asking for these things, and certainly no shame in being turn down.

The Third Truism

The vast majority of sellers would much prefer to give you a 5-10-20% discount rather than have you leave the store without buying anything. In lots of countries the seller will probably follow you down the street yelling that you’ll get a much better deal if you’ll just come back, but that’s highly unlikely to happen in Europe or the U.S. or Europe.

You’re the one that needs to ask for the better price, so here are six negotiating tips.

1) A Bird In The Hand

Offer to pay cash and you’ll almost always get a discount. There are lots of different reasons for this, but the main one is that it costs the dealer between two and five percent when you pay with a credit card.

If you want to play with the seller’s head a little, then offer him a Diner’s Club or American Express card and then ask if there’s a discount for cash.

They charge merchants almost double what Master Card and Visa do.

2) Don’t Talk Too Much

After you ask for a discount, keep quiet and wait. It might not be easy but you must leave the ball in the seller’s court.

3) Make Sure The Seller Spends A Lot Of Time With You

Someone that walks into a store and immediately asks for a discount will have far less chance of getting one than somebody that has taken twenty minutes of the seller’s time.

4) Never say, “Let me be honest with you”.

How would you feel if after several minutes of conversation somebody said, “Let me be honest with you”.

You’d have to ask yourself what he’d being doing up until then.

5) Take It Or Leave It!

Don’t ever say, “Take it or leave it”.

You’ll hardly ever get a better deal by giving an ultimatum, and you’ll more than likely bring about a quick and sorry end to the negotiating process.

6) Avoid Saying “What’s the lowest amount you’ll agree to?”.

First of all, the seller will never tell you, and secondly he’ll have serious doubts about wanting to deal with you at all.

Negotiating With Creditors

Negotiating with credit card companies or other lenders is not dissimilar to negotiating with vendors.

1) Asking a credit card company to lower your interest, or forgive a part of your debt is not a shameful thing to do.

2) A lender would much rather have you repay a part of you debt than have you file for bankruptcy.

Supposing Negotiating Just Isn’t For You.

If you just can’t bring yourself to negotiate, then have someone do it for you, and even if you pay them for doing it, you’ll still come out ahead.

I used to hate selling my cars, and didn’t want to quibble with the dealership where I was buying the new car, or haggle with private parties, so I used to call a friend of mine who excelled at wheeling and dealing, and after finding out what a good blue book price would be, I’d tell him that anything that he got over and above that price was for him, and we’d always both end up happy.

If you’d prefer to have a third party negotiate with your creditors for you, then be sure to choose an agency or company that’s Better Business Bureau affiliated, and if bankruptcy is an option then check out where you can get a free consultation with a local bankruptcy attorney.

There is certainly nothing wrong with getting the best deals that you can get, and not even trying would really be selling yourself short, so next time you want to purchase something, remember the above tips and put them to good use, and save yourself a growing amount of money.

The author of this article was a film producer, and award winning film sound editor for many years. He has long been interested in finance and economics, and one of his websites -> Home Loan Help has a large number of very popular articles about the world’s economy in general, and bad debt loans, debt settlement, debt consolidation, and bankruptcy in particular.

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