premium refund - meaning and definition. What is premium refund
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What (who) is premium refund - definition

Inventor Advance Rapid Refund; Inventor Advance Rapid Tax Refunds; Tax Refund Anticipation Loan; Refund Anticipation Loan; Refund anticipation; Tax refund loan; Refund anticipation loans; "Refund anticipation check"; Refund anticipation check
  • Use of tax-time financial products, such as refund anticipation loans, in 2016

Liquidity premium         
In economics, a liquidity premium is the explanation for a difference between two types of financial securities (e.g.
Risk premium         
MINIMUM AMOUNT OF MONEY BY WHICH THE EXPECTED RETURN ON A RISKY ASSET MUST EXCEED THE KNOWN RETURN ON A RISK-FREE ASSET
Certainty equivalent; Risk Premium; Risk premia; Risk Premiums; Premium for risk; Certainty-equivalent
A risk premium is a measure of excess return that is required by an individual to compensate being subjected to an increased level of risk. It is used widely in finance and economics, the general definition being the expected risky return less the risk-free return, as demonstrated by the formula below.
Refund         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Refund (disambiguation); Refunds
·vt To pour back.
II. Refund ·vt To supply again with funds; to Reimburse.
III. Refund ·vt To give back; to Repay; to Restore.
IV. Refund ·vt To fund again or anew; to replace (a fund or loan) by a new fund; as, to refund a railroad loan.

Wikipedia

Refund anticipation loan

Refund anticipation loan (RAL) is a short-term consumer loan in the United States provided by a third party against an expected tax refund for the duration it takes the tax authority to pay the refund. The loan term was usually about two to three weeks, related to the time it took the U.S. Internal Revenue Service to deposit refunds in electronic accounts. The loans were designed to make the refund available in as little as 24 hours. They were secured by a taxpayer's expected tax refund, and designed to offer customers quicker access to funds.

The costs to the borrower could be significant compared to other lending and some consumer organizations warned consumers of the risk involved in this type of loan. They are a largely discontinued financial product and beginning with the 2013 tax filing season, they have been largely replaced with the similar refund anticipation checks (RAC), as well as a hodge podge of other financial products.

RACs are temporary accounts which wait for the client's IRS tax refund, and which also provides a way for the client to pay for tax preparation out of the refund. Both financial products have similar fees and similar risks of third-party bank "cross-collection".

A similar process in Canada to a RAL is termed "tax rebate discounting".