Timely article!! I've looked into cryonics twice in the past when I had less income (2001 and 2005) and in each case the expected value calculation came out negative and I passed. Lately I've decided that I should probably sign up, but I'm running into logistical problems figuring how to build a retirement/cryonics/singularity portfolio that optimizes and hedges over a variety of pragmatic concerns.
Things I'm trying to figure out how to optimize over include: (1) the mainstream model of a relatively stable economy combined with personal decline into old age and death around 70 which suggests relatively normal retirement/estate planning, (2) the possibility of early death which can be hedged with insurance, (3) the potential for inflation or hyper-inflation due to government insolvency and/or war, (4) the possibility of a singularity based deflationary economic boom where I'd want high liquidity to stay nimble in hopes of "riding the curve up" with the possibility of never needing the cryo-policy in the first place. My impression is that I'll need to invest in a variety of things over time to ensure a reasonably good position no matter what actually happens.
One thing that I would be interested in as a part of such a strategy is a term life insurance policy that lasts for about 25 years with very low counter party risk and an index to inflation that's relatively immune to political shenanigans. Anyone know of a good place to buy such a policy? Another thing I've been thinking of is creating a private trust to optimize estate taxes and lawsuits. It seems likely that other people here would be interested in the same sort of instruments for similar reasons, which suggests an opportunity for a group to get together and bargain collectively with lawyers and insurance companies to make the transactions cheaper due to economies of scale. If we had enough interest it seems like we should be able to get a group life policy with better rates. Is anyone interested in such a cooperative venture?
One thing that I would be interested in as a part of such a strategy is a term life insurance policy that lasts for about 25 years with very low counter party risk and an index to inflation that's relatively immune to political shenanigans.
I've never seen inflation-indexed life insurance. If you expect 4% inflation to continue throughout the course of your 25 year term, it might be easier to just buy a bit more than double the amount you need. The more initially expensive option would be to get universal life, which you could set up to allow expanded b...
One of the sticking points for cryonics is how expensive it is. Unfortunately, the estimates on LW (eg. in Normal Cryonics) are likely to be low as they are current costs. This is starting to come to a head for Alcor, with Alcor's low growth rate meaning it faces a rising tide of aging members (hence that emphasis on young cryonicists) and fundamental flaws in its prices; the official word has come down in the latest issue of Cryonics, issue 2011 q4:
Cryopreservation Funding and Inflation: The need for Action; A Discussion Article by the Management and Board of Directors of Alcor
What to do?
Hope the old grandfathered members like Mike Darwin (who predicted this, in the February and March 1988 issues of Cryonics) can afford that.
On a parting note, I read somewhere that CI's low prices have rarely risen. I wonder what their projections look like...