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prévoyance

Prévoyance is a French term referring to the set of measures and products that provide financial protection against the consequences of life risks such as illness, disability, death, or old age. It covers both public social protections and private insurance arrangements intended to anticipate and mitigate financial hardship resulting from unforeseen events. The central idea is risk transfer: individuals or households transfer the financial impact of a risk to an insurer or to a provident institution in exchange for a regular payment or premium.

Typical prévoyance products include life insurance (death benefit and sometimes guaranteed education or care provisions), disability

In France and other Francophone jurisdictions, institutions de prévoyance, insurance companies, and mutuals administer these plans.

Prévoyance is typically complementary to public pension systems, which provide basic income in retirement but may

income
insurance
that
replaces
a
portion
of
earnings
during
incapacity,
critical
illness
coverage,
and
long-term
care
cover.
Many
plans
also
address
unemployment
or
retirement
by
providing
defined
benefits
or
pensions.
Prévoyance
can
be
arranged
as
individual
policies
or
through
collective
or
group
contracts
offered
by
employers
or
professional
associations.
Employer-sponsored
provisions
are
common
and
may
be
partly
funded
by
the
employer,
the
employee,
or
both.
Coverage
terms,
benefit
amounts,
and
eligibility
vary
by
contract
and
by
national
regulation.
not
cover
all
risks
adequately.
Tax
treatment
and
social
security
rules
governing
prévoyance
benefits
differ
by
country
and
policy,
and
participants
should
review
terms
closely.