The Society of Settlement Planners (SSP) has invited Patrick Hindert, Managing Director of S2KM Limited and The Settlement Services Group (TSSG), to organize a discussion about "Structured Settlement Public Policy" for the SSP 2010 Annual Meeting May 3 in Washington, D.C.
For additional information about the SSP and NSSTA 2010 Annual Meetings, see this prior S2KM post.
S2KM's objectives:
- Improve and grow the structured settlement market.
- Promote public discussions about structured settlement public policy. S2KM has previously published a structured settlement public policy wiki featuring Joseph Dehner, Robert Wood and Jeremy Babener.
- Invite and challenge
the best and brightest structured settlement knowledge experts to:
- Attend the SSP 2010 Annual Meeting; and
- Participate in a public discussion about structured settlement public policy.
Preliminary public policy questions - also posted on S2KM's public policy wiki.
- What is a structured settlement?
- What does "public policy" mean generally - and specifically for structured settlements?
- Why is public policy important for structured settlements?
- Who and what defines structured settlement public policy?
- What changes have occurred in structured
settlement public policy?
- Before 1982
- Between 1982 and 2000
- Since 2001
- Based upon existing structured settlement public policy, what constitutes best business practices, bad business practices and illegal business practices?
- What are the most important structured settlement public policy issues?
- Does structured
settlement public policy support:
- Single claimant IRC section 468B qualified settlement funds?
- Court-approved structured settlement factoring transactions pursuant to IRC 5891 and state structured settlement protection statutes?
- Tax exclusions for non-physical injuries as well as physical?
- Tax credits rather than the current tax exclusion?
- How many structured settlement recipients pay federal income taxes - or gain any financial advantage from the structured settlement tax exclusion?
- Do personal injury victims have a greater propensity to dissipate their financial resources than non-personal injury victims?
- Or, does public policy actually require and promote dissipation by injury victims and other disabled persons? For example, Medicaid asset requirements and resulting asset "pay down" strategies.
- Should the existence of the secondary market disqualify annuities as a funding option for special needs trusts?
- Does the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 apply to structured settlement annuities?
- Why should structured settlement annuities cost less than lump sum alternatives to fund Medicare set-aside arrangements (MSAs)?
- How has health care reform changed structured settlement public policy?
- Does public policy support expanded use of the Internet for marketing, communication, education and collaboration? If yes, how does the Internet and Internet public policy impact the future of structured settlements?
- How can SSP members and attendees influence structured settlement public policy?
- How can members of NSSTA, SSP, NASP, NAMSAP and NAELA better identify and promote their collaborative public policy knowledge and shared public policy interests?
- Should the structured settlement industry encourage public policy analysis and promote best business practices in the context of public policy?
- Does public policy analysis and promotion of best business practices strengthen or weaken the structured settlement industry?
For additional S2KM reporting about SSP and NSSTA, see:
- S2KM's blog post titled "SSP and NSSTA 2010 Annual Meetings" and
- S2KM's structured settlement wiki.
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