Do you have a suggestion for what to do if I'm trying to hedge against a scenario where the fed manages inflation at less than 6% for most years (as it has done since 1983), but then a debt crisis (or whatever) produces N years of 10%-100% inflation between now and the time I would need the money?
I've thought of just insuring for like $3M to be safe, but that costs more and gives me a giant pile of money in scenarios where I have no striking need for the giant pile of money (and it doesn't even hedge against counter-party risk in the event that things get ugly and the ugliness bankrupts a business-as-usual insurance company I had relied on to survive). I'd prefer to transfer excess life insurance payouts from futures that avoided hyperinflation to other futures where no financial crisis happens and instead nimble investment money is important for participating in the benefits technological growth. "Just buying more insurance" seems like an expensive way to accomplish less than half of what I'm interested in.
It seems an insurance company staffed with financial wizkids should be able to invest in a thoughtfully chosen package of TIPS, oil futures, renminbi, and similar instruments to provide exactly the kind of life insurance that I want, but I don't know where to shop for such a service if it already exists and I don't yet have the pragmatic financial knowledge to create such a service by my own initiative if it doesn't.
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...