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Author Topic: I'm sure more Hmong have it than Hispanic cause Hmong sales people would knock  (Read 446 times)

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Offline theking

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..on other Hmong's door and tried to sell life insurance left and right back in the day (legally and illegally)  ???:

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Many Hispanics are missing out on this key wealth-building tool

Hispanic Americans are less likely to carry life insurance than the average American, missing out on a key source of financial security.

Only 42% of Hispanics have a life insurance policy, below the U.S. average of 50%, according to a 2022 Insurance Barometer Study supplemental report from LIMRA and Life Happens. Even more concerning, that percentage has declined 13 points in the past 11 years.

Trust issues, language barriers, and cultural differences are among the reasons keeping Hispanics from getting life insurance, experts said, a critical cash infusion that could help close the wealth gap in the Hispanic community.

“Life insurance is something many people think about, but don’t act on, especially in the Hispanic community,” said Roselyn Sanchez, an actress, producer, and dancer who is partnering with Life Happens as its spokesperson for September’s Life Insurance Awareness Month.

“My daughter is 10 and I didn’t get life insurance until she was 2 years old when my business manager mentioned that I needed it as a parent to protect my daughter,” Sanchez told Yahoo Money. “There’s a lack of education in the Hispanic community around life insurance, but once I read and learned about it, I knew it was necessary.”

The report found that 27% of Hispanics are looking for a financial advisor, but only 2.7% of certified financial planners (CFP) are Hispanic. A lack of representation in the insurance and financial industry makes it harder to build trust.

“Life insurance can be an uncomfortable topic, especially if you don’t trust the person or have a language barrier, you’d rather not do it,” Sanchez said. “I have the luxury and blessing to potentially help use this platform, transmitting messages in English and Spanish.”

For instance, with Sanchez as spokesperson, Life Happens has made its “Life Insurance 101” and life insurance calculator resources available in Spanish on its website — El ABC de los seguros de vida.

Even when language barriers don’t exist, there are cultural differences between Hispanics — Afro-Latinos, Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, Mexicans, and Cubans, for instance — and the use of the terms Hispanic, Latino, or Latinx.



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Offline NtsesHnub

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First Financial  :2funny:



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Different 💩 same smell

 

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