|
|
|
|
|
by tifik
550 days ago
|
|
From a morbidly capitalistic point of view, insurance companies should rejoice at the prospect of a very ill person opting for assisted death. I imagine the procedure to end ones life would be much cheaper than multiple years of procedures and medicine to keep them alive. And if this is the case (which I don't actually know for sure, I'm just speculating), then insurance companies would be incentivized to 'nudge' certain people towards this decision, which is a super duper slippery slope, and at the extreme end you'd have the Rick and Morty dead people spaghetti planet situation. edit - this of course applies only to people that would have the procedures and medicine that would keep them alive covered. |
|
Therefore, the longer one lives, the benefit accrues to the insurance co, because the more premium policy holder pays to LifeInsuranceCo (LIC), LIC has more time to earn interest/investment profits from those premiums, and the cheaper the payout from LIC to policy holder beneficiary, because of inflation and since most payout amounts (eg $1M) are fixed at time of policy issuance.