1 Ethics Principles and Practices
Ethics refers to the moral principles and standards that guide behavior and decision-making. In insurance, ethics are crucial because producers handle sensitive financial information and make recommendations that significantly impact clients' lives.
Honesty
Be truthful in all communications and never misrepresent policy terms, coverage, or costs.
Integrity
Do what is right, even when no one is watching. Maintain consistent ethical standards.
Fairness
Treat all clients equally and provide recommendations based on their needs, not your commission.
Competence
Maintain adequate knowledge and skills through continuing education to serve clients properly.
Confidentiality
Protect client information and never share sensitive data without proper authorization.
Diligence
Handle all client matters promptly and thoroughly, from applications to claims.
2 Ethics for Insurance Agents
Insurance agents have ethical responsibilities to four key stakeholders. Understanding these duties is essential for the exam and for professional practice.
Responsibility to Insurer
- - Accurate representation - Truthfully represent policy terms and company capabilities
- - Complete applications - Submit accurate and complete information
- - Premium handling - Handle premiums properly and remit promptly
- - Follow guidelines - Adhere to underwriting and company rules
Responsibility to Policyowners
- - Fiduciary duty - Act in the client's best interest at all times
- - Full disclosure - Explain all policy terms, exclusions, and limitations
- - Suitable recommendations - Match coverage to client's actual needs
- - Maintain confidentiality - Protect personal and financial information
Responsibility to the Public
- - Fair dealing - Treat all members of the public fairly
- - No discrimination - Don't unfairly discriminate in providing service
- - Professional conduct - Maintain the integrity of the profession
- - Honest advertising - Never use deceptive marketing practices
Responsibility to the State
- - Comply with laws - Follow all insurance laws and regulations
- - Maintain license - Keep license current, complete CE requirements
- - Report violations - Report known violations of insurance laws
- - Cooperate with regulators - Respond to inquiries from the Commissioner
Memory Trick: "I PPS"
Remember the four stakeholders: Insurer, Policyowners, Public, State
3 Avoiding Unethical Practices
The following practices are prohibited and can result in license revocation, fines, and criminal charges:
Misrepresentation
Making false or misleading statements about a policy, company, or competitor.
Example:
Telling a client their policy covers flood damage when it actually excludes it.
Twisting
Inducing a policyholder to replace an existing policy through misrepresentation, primarily to generate a new commission.
Example:
Convincing a client their current policy is worthless so they buy a new one (that earns you commission), when the original policy was perfectly adequate.
Churning
Excessive replacement of policies to generate commissions, causing harm to the client.
Example:
Replacing a client's policy every year when there's no benefit to the client - just to earn repeated commissions.
Rebating
Returning part of the premium or commission to the client as an inducement to purchase.
Example:
"If you buy this policy, I'll give you $100 back from my commission." This is illegal unfair competition.
Defamation
Making false, harmful statements about competitors or their products.
Example:
"ABC Insurance never pays claims" - when that's demonstrably false.
Coercion
Using force, threats, or intimidation to compel someone to purchase or cancel insurance.
Example:
A lender refusing to approve a loan unless the borrower buys insurance from a specific agent.
Quick Comparison: Twisting vs Churning
| Aspect | Twisting | Churning |
|---|---|---|
| Frequency | Single replacement | Repeated/excessive replacements |
| Method | Uses misrepresentation | May or may not misrepresent |
| Motive | Commission on one sale | Multiple commissions over time |
| Both are... | Illegal and can result in license revocation | |
4 Ethics vs Values
Ethics
External standards set by society, professions, or laws that define right and wrong conduct.
Characteristics:
- - Established by groups/society
- - Can be enforced (laws, regulations)
- - May change based on professional standards
- - Universal within a profession
Values
Internal beliefs that individuals hold about what is important and worthwhile.
Characteristics:
- - Personal and individual
- - Internally motivated
- - Shaped by culture, family, experience
- - Vary from person to person
Key Insight
Ethics guide professional behavior regardless of personal values. Even if your personal values differ, you must adhere to professional ethics when acting as an insurance producer.
Exam Trap Alerts
Twisting vs Churning
Twisting = ONE replacement using misrepresentation. Churning = REPEATED/excessive replacements. Both involve commission motive, but churning is ongoing.
Rebating is ALWAYS Illegal
Even if the client benefits from the lower cost, returning premium or commission as an inducement to purchase is illegal in NJ.
Agents Represent the INSURER
Despite having duties to policyowners, agents legally represent the insurer. Brokers represent the client. Don't confuse these!
Ethics vs Values Question
Ethics = external/professional standards. Values = internal/personal beliefs. The exam loves testing this distinction!
Four Stakeholders
Remember "I PPS" - Insurer, Policyowners, Public, State. Questions may ask which stakeholder a specific duty applies to.
Quick Reference Summary
| Unethical Practice | Definition |
|---|---|
| Misrepresentation | False or misleading statements about policies |
| Twisting | Single replacement through misrepresentation for commission |
| Churning | Excessive policy replacements for repeated commissions |
| Rebating | Returning premium/commission as purchase inducement |
| Defamation | False, harmful statements about competitors |
| Coercion | Using threats/force to compel insurance purchase |