Jack Bobo, 96, a longtime life insurance agent and life industry leader, died Jan. 15 in Phoenix, the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors announced Thursday.
Bobo may have been best known as an officer at the National Association of Life Underwriters (NALU) — the group now known as the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors.
While representing NALU in Washington, as a committee member, president and long-serving executive vice president, he fended off or softened a wide range of legislative proposals, such as an effort by the Reagan administration to tax the "inside build-up" of value within life insurance policies and deferred annuities, and repeated efforts by Democrats to establish a government-run national health insurance program.
After Bobo retired from his position as executive vice president of NALU, he became a regular columnist for National Underwriter Life & Health, a print publication that came to be owned by ALM, the company that owns ThinkAdvisor. His columns appeared from 1993 through 2010.
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As a columnist, Bobo worked to promote the value of helping consumers "become their own bankers" by putting money into life insurance.
In one column, in 2005, he worried about many homeowners lack of savings and dependence on interest-only mortgage loans, and on financial services companies' failure to promote saving.
"The irony is that the banks, once the champions of thrift, are, in my judgment, among the worst offenders," Bobo wrote. "Never a day passes that I do not receive a call from someone offering to refinance our home. I reply that we have no mortgage; then they want to help "release the equity" in our house in order to more fully enjoy life in some way.
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Bobo also worked hard to bolster the reputations of insurance professionals and the products and services they provide, to have NALU adapt to insurance and financial professionals' changing needs, NAIFA said.
"Bobo was a legendary producer and leader in the life insurance industry who contributed the wealth of his talents and hard work to foster NAIFA's success over several decades of his service," NAIFA said.
Early Days
Bobo was born in South Carolina in 1924. He went to grade school at Public School 41 in New York City, and his first significant exposure to financial services was putting nickels and dimes into individual containers, which were then sent to a local bank that deposited the change into individual bank accounts set up for each child.