SCHEDULE 14A

                                 (Rule 14a-101)

                     INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
               Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.   )

Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [_]

Check the appropriate box:

[_]  Preliminary Proxy Statement          [_]  Soliciting Material Under Rule
[_]  Confidential, For Use of the              14a-12
     Commission Only (as permitted
     by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[X]  Definitive Proxy Statement
[_]  Definitive Additional Materials




                               THE MONY GROUP INC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)


Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]  No fee required.
[_]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

1)   Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

________________________________________________________________________________
2)   Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

________________________________________________________________________________

3)   Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction  computed  pursuant
     to Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is
     calculated and state how it was determined):

________________________________________________________________________________
4)   Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

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5)   Total fee paid:

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[_]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials:

________________________________________________________________________________
[_]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the  offsetting  fee was paid
     previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration statement number,
     or the form or schedule and the date of its filing.

     1)   Amount previously paid:

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     2)   Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

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     3)   Filing Party:

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     4)   Date Filed:

________________________________________________________________________________


[LOGO]


April 1, 2002



Dear Shareholder:

It is a pleasure to invite you to attend the 2002 Annual Meeting of Shareholders
of The MONY Group Inc. The meeting  will be held at The St. Regis Hotel,  2 East
55th Street at Fifth Avenue, New York City, on Wednesday,  May 15, 2002, at 9:30
a.m.,  local time. The formal notice of the meeting,  the Proxy  Statement,  the
Annual Report (as filed with the  Securities and Exchange  Commission)  and your
proxy card are enclosed in this mailing.

At the meeting, you will be asked to elect directors,  ratify the appointment of
independent accountants,  approve The MONY Group Inc. 2002 Annual Incentive Plan
for Senior  Executive  Officers,  approve  The MONY Group  Inc.  2002  Long-Term
Performance Plan for Senior  Executive  Officers and approve The MONY Group Inc.
2002 Stock Option Plan.

YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT.  Whether or not you plan to attend the Annual Meeting in
person,  we ask that you  execute  and  return  your proxy  promptly,  using the
postage-paid  envelope we have  provided  for your  convenience.  Also,  you may
submit your proxy by telephone or over the Internet if you wish.  Please see the
information included on the enclosed proxy card in this regard.  Submitting your
vote at  this  time  will  save  your  Company  the  cost  of  additional  proxy
solicitation.

Thank you for your continued support.

Sincerely,




/s/ Michael I. Roth                     /s/ Samuel J. Foti
-----------------------                 --------------------
Michael I. Roth                         Samuel J. Foti
CHAIRMAN AND CHIEF                      PRESIDENT AND CHIEF
EXECUTIVE OFFICER                       OPERATING OFFICER




                               THE MONY GROUP INC.

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

                                    --------


                                                1740 Broadway
                                                New York, New York 10019
                                                April 1, 2002



To The Shareholders:

The Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  of The MONY Group Inc. will be held at The
St.  Regis  Hotel,  2 East  55th  Street  at Fifth  Avenue,  New York  City,  on
Wednesday, May 15, 2002, at 9:30 a.m., local time, to consider and act upon:

     1.   Election of five  directors for a term of three years,  or until their
          successors are elected and qualified;

     2.   Ratification of the appointment of independent accountants;

     3.   Approval of The MONY Group Inc. 2002 Annual  Incentive Plan for Senior
          Executive Officers;

     4.   Approval of The MONY Group Inc. 2002  Long-Term  Performance  Plan for
          Senior Executive Officers;

     5.   Approval of The MONY Group Inc. 2002 Stock Option Plan; and

     6.   Such other  business  as may  properly  come before the meeting or any
          adjournment thereof.

Shareholders  of  record  as of the  close of  business  on March  18,  2002 are
entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual  Meeting  and any  adjournment
thereof.

                                        By Order of the Board of Directors

                                        /s/ Lee M. Smith
                                        ------------------------
                                        Lee M. Smith
                                        VICE PRESIDENT AND CORPORATE SECRETARY



OUR ANNUAL MEETING WILL ALSO BE WEBCAST ON OUR WEBSITE AT  WWW.MONY.COM  AT 9:30
A.M. ON MAY 15, 2002.




                              --------------------
                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                                  MAY 15, 2002
                              --------------------

                                  INTRODUCTION

SOLICITATION OF PROXIES

This Proxy  Statement is furnished in connection  with the  solicitation  by the
Board of Directors of The MONY Group Inc. (the  "Company") of proxies to be used
at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of the Company on Wednesday, May 15, 2002,
at 9:30 a.m. at The St. Regis  Hotel,  2 East 55th Street at Fifth  Avenue,  New
York City, and at any adjournment  thereof. The Company's Annual Report for 2001
and this Proxy  Statement are being sent to  shareholders  beginning on or about
April 1, 2002.

Shares  represented  by valid proxies will be voted at the Annual Meeting or any
adjournment  thereof in accordance with each  shareholder's  directions.  Please
vote by  marking  the  appropriate  boxes,  signing,  dating and  returning  the
enclosed proxy card. If the card is signed and returned without  direction,  the
shares  will be voted  as  recommended  by the  Company's  Board  of  Directors.
Alternatively,  a proxy may be submitted by  telephone or the  Internet.  Please
follow the  instructions  on the enclosed  proxy card if you wish to submit your
proxy in this manner. A proxy may be revoked by a shareholder at any time before
its use by  filing  written  notice  of  revocation,  by  telephone  or over the
Internet, by submitting a subsequent proxy to the Secretary of the Company or by
voting in person at the meeting.

OUTSTANDING STOCK AND VOTING RIGHTS


The  Company's  Board of Directors  has fixed the close of business on March 18,
2002 as the record  date for  determining  shareholders  of record  entitled  to
notice of, and to vote at, the Annual  Meeting.  On the record date, the Company
had outstanding  48,515,528 shares of Common Stock. Each shareholder is entitled
to one vote for each share of Common Stock  registered  in that person's name on
the books of the Company on the record date on all matters  submitted  to a vote
of the  shareholders at the meeting.  The presence of one-third of the Company's
outstanding common shares in person or by proxy will constitute a quorum for the
transaction  of  business at the Annual  Meeting.  Provided a quorum is present,
directors  will be  elected  by a  plurality  of the votes  validly  cast in the
election and the vote of a majority of the shares of Common Stock represented in
person or by proxy will be sufficient for the  transaction of any other business
properly brought before the Annual Meeting.  Abstentions from voting,  including
broker non-votes, with respect to shares present at the Annual Meeting in person
or by proxy will have no effect in determining whether a quorum is present or on
the  election  of  directors,  but will  have the  effect of votes  against  any
business other than the election of directors.



             OWNERSHIP OF COMMON STOCK BY CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS

FIVE PERCENT SHAREHOLDERS

The Company has no information that any person beneficially owns more than 5% of
its  outstanding  Common Stock except as reported on Schedule 13G filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") by Goldman, Sachs & Co. ("Goldman
Sachs") and certain affiliates  pursuant to the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934
(the  "Exchange  Act").  The  following  table and notes have been  prepared  in
reliance  upon such filing for the nature of  ownership  and an  explanation  of
overlapping ownership.



                                                                  AMOUNT AND NATURE
                  NAME AND ADDRESS OF                          OF BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP            PERCENT OF
                   BENEFICIAL OWNER                           REPORTED ON SCHEDULE 13G               CLASS
                  -------------------                          -----------------------             ---------
                                                                                              
      The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
              85 Broad Street
        New York, NY 10004(1) ................................        3,797,780                      7.3%


----------
(1)  Consists of 3,797,780  shares  beneficially  owned by Goldman Sachs and The
     Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. ("GS Group"); 2,341,435 shares beneficially owned
     by GS Mezzanine Partners,  L.P.;  1,257,291 shares beneficially owned by GS
     Mezzanine Partners Offshore,  L.P.;  3,598,726 shares beneficially owned by
     GS Mezzanine  Advisors,  L.L.C.;  80,076 shares beneficially owned by Stone
     Street Fund 1997, L.P.; 38,890 shares  beneficially  owned by Bridge Street
     Fund



                                       1


     1997,  L.P.  and 118,966  shares  beneficially  owned by Stone Street 1997,
     L.L.C.  Includes an aggregate of 3,717,692 shares issuable upon exercise of
     currently  exercisable  warrants  held by GS Mezzanine  Partners,  L.P., GS
     Mezzanine Partners Offshore, L.P., Stone Street Fund 1997, L.P., and Bridge
     Street Fund 1997, L.P.  (collectively,  the  "Investors"),  pursuant to the
     Investment Agreement (the "Investment Agreement"), dated as of December 30,
     1997, by and among The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York (now known
     as MONY Life  Insurance  Company)  ("MONY Life"),  MONY Financial  Services
     Corporation (now known as The MONY Group Inc.) and the Investors.  GS Group
     and Goldman  Sachs each  disclaim  beneficial  ownership of the  securities
     beneficially owned by (i) any client accounts with respect to which Goldman
     Sachs or employees of Goldman Sachs have voting or  investment  discretion,
     or both and (ii) certain investment  entities,  of which a subsidiary of GS
     Group or Goldman Sachs is the general partner,  managing general partner or
     other manager, to the extent interests in such entities are held by persons
     other than GS Group, Goldman Sachs or their affiliates.

GOLDMAN  INVESTMENT.  On December  30,  1997,  the  Investors  entered  into the
Investment  Agreement pursuant to which: (i) the Investors  purchased,  for $115
million (the  "Consideration"),  surplus notes (the "MONY Notes") issued by MONY
Life with an aggregate principal amount equal to the Consideration, and (ii) the
Investors  purchased,  for $10.0 million,  warrants (the "Warrants") to purchase
from the Company  (after  giving effect to the initial  public  offering) in the
aggregate  7.0% of the fully diluted Common Stock as of the first date following
such  effectiveness  on which  shares  of  Common  Stock  were  first  issued to
policyholders  (December 24, 1998) (the "Specified Date"). On March 8, 2000 MONY
Life  repurchased  the MONY Notes from the Investors  for an aggregate  purchase
price of $123,775,937.

     STANDSTILL AGREEMENT.  Pursuant to the Investment Agreement, the Investors,
     for a period of five years  following the Specified  Date (the  "Standstill
     Period"),  subject  to  certain  exceptions  specified  in  the  Investment
     Agreement,  will not, and will cause their  subsidiaries and any affiliates
     that own Warrants or Common Stock that was acquired upon  exercise  thereof
     not to,  directly  or  indirectly,  acquire,  offer to  acquire or agree to
     acquire any outstanding Common Stock other than pursuant to the Warrants or
     from an Investor or a subsidiary  or  affiliate of an Investor  without the
     prior  written  approval  of  MONY  Life.  The  foregoing  provisions  will
     terminate when the Investors and their  subsidiaries  and  affiliates  that
     acquire Warrants or Common Stock upon the exercise thereof own an aggregate
     number of shares of Common Stock  acquired  upon  exercise of Warrants plus
     the number of shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise thereof that is
     less than 5% of the fully  diluted  Common  Stock.  The  Company has agreed
     that, so long as the  Investors,  their  subsidiaries  and  affiliates  are
     subject to the provisions described in this paragraph, it will not take any
     action  (including,  without  limitation,  adoption of a shareholder rights
     plan) that would have the effect of imposing more stringent requirements on
     the Investors,  their  subsidiaries  and affiliates than those contained in
     the Investment Agreement.

     VOTING OF COMMON STOCK. The Investors have agreed that,  subject to certain
     exceptions  provided in the  Investment  Agreement,  during the  Standstill
     Period the Investors will, and will cause their subsidiaries and affiliates
     that acquire  Common Stock upon exercise of Warrants to, vote all shares of
     Common Stock  acquired upon exercise of Warrants  owned by them either,  at
     the option of the Company,  in accordance  with the  recommendation  of the
     Company's  Board of Directors or in the same  proportion  as the holders of
     Common  Stock  who  are not  affiliated  with  either  the  Company  or the
     Investors with respect to all matters properly  presented for a vote of the
     holders of the Common Stock.  The foregoing  requirement will not apply and
     the Investors and their  subsidiaries  and  affiliates  may acquire  Common
     Stock  without  regard  to the  restrictions  contained  in the  Investment
     Agreement  described  above  with  respect to  certain  specified  matters,
     including  those that  relate to: (i) any  merger,  consolidation  or other
     business  combination   involving,   or  sale,  lease,  transfer  or  other
     disposition of substantially  all the assets of, the Company,  MONY Life or
     any Significant Subsidiary (as defined in the Investment  Agreement);  (ii)
     the approval of any amendment to the Company's Certificate of Incorporation
     or  By-Laws;  (iii) any matter  that could  result in any  decrease  in the
     percentage of the voting power represented by the aggregate voting power of
     all Common Stock and Common Stock  issuable  upon exercise of Warrants then
     owned by the Investors and their subsidiaries and affiliates;  and (iv) any
     other matter (other than the election of directors)  that in the good faith
     judgment  of the  Investors  could  adversely  affect  their  interests  as
     significant  stockholders of the Company.  The foregoing  provisions  shall
     terminate when the Investors and their  subsidiaries  and  affiliates  that
     acquire Warrants or Common Stock upon the exercise thereof own an aggregate
     number of shares of Common Stock  acquired  upon  exercise of Warrants plus
     the number of shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise thereof that is
     less than 5% of the fully diluted Common Stock.

     LIMITATION ON SALES OF COMMON STOCK AND WARRANTS. The Investors have agreed
     that until the  termination  of the Standstill  Period,  they will not, and
     will cause their  subsidiaries  and affiliates  that own Warrants or Common
     Stock that was acquired upon exercise of Warrants not to, sell, transfer or
     otherwise  dispose of any Warrants or Common  Stock that was acquired  upon
     exercise of Warrants in a negotiated  transaction (which for these purposes
     does not  include an open market sale other than as a result of an offer to
     sell  securities  having  aggregate  voting  rights  of more than 3% of the
     voting rights on an as converted basis at any one time):  (i) to any Person
     (as defined in the Investment Agreement) that


                                       2


     is  engaged  in Life  Insurance  Business  (as  defined  in the  Investment
     Agreement) if, to the knowledge of the  transferor,  after giving effect to
     such  transaction  such Person would own an  aggregate  number of shares of
     Common  Stock  plus the  number of shares of  Common  Stock  issuable  upon
     exercise  of  Warrants  that is held by such  Person that is equal to 3% or
     more of the  fully  diluted  Common  Stock at the time of such  transaction
     without the prior written consent of the Company, or (ii) to any Person if,
     to the knowledge of the transferor, after giving effect to such transaction
     such Person  would own an  aggregate  number of shares of Common Stock plus
     the number of shares of Common  Stock  issuable  upon  exercise of Warrants
     that is  held by such  Person  that  is  equal  to 5% or more of the  fully
     diluted  Common  Stock at the time of such  transaction  without  the prior
     written consent of the Company.  The foregoing  restriction  will not apply
     to: (i) any transfers  between or among the Investors,  their  subsidiaries
     and  affiliates,   or  (ii)  any  widely  distributed  public  underwritten
     offering.  The foregoing  provisions  will terminate when the Investors and
     their  subsidiaries  and affiliates  that acquire  Warrants or Common Stock
     upon the exercise thereof own an aggregate number of shares of Common Stock
     acquired  upon  exercise  of  Warrants  plus the number of shares of Common
     Stock  issuable  upon  exercise  thereof  that is less than 5% of the fully
     diluted  Common Stock.

     BOARD REPRESENTATION.  Pursuant to the Investment Agreement,  the Investors
     have been granted Board  representation  rights.  The Company has agreed to
     use its best efforts to cause one of the persons  proposed by the Investors
     to be elected to the Company's  Board of Directors.  Claude M. Ballard,  as
     such person,  retired from the Company's  Board of Directors on January 11,
     2000.  Mr. Ballard was a limited  partner of The Goldman Sachs Group,  L.P.
     The Investors have not proposed another nominee at this time.

     The Investors have agreed to not propose any person who: (i) at the time of
     such  proposal  is either a member of the  board of  directors  or board of
     trustees  or a senior  officer of an entity  engaged in the Life  Insurance
     Business,  or (ii) is not qualified to serve as a director  pursuant to the
     By-Laws of the Company. The Investors' Board representation  rights granted
     by the  Investment  Agreement  will  terminate when the Investors and their
     subsidiaries  and affiliates that acquire Warrants or Common Stock upon the
     exercise thereof own an aggregate number of shares of Common Stock acquired
     upon  exercise  of  Warrants  plus the  number of  shares  of Common  Stock
     issuable  upon  exercise  thereof that is less than 5% of the fully diluted
     Common Stock.

     REGISTRATION  RIGHTS.  Pursuant to the Investment Agreement the Company has
     entered into a registration  rights agreement granting to the Investors and
     their  subsidiaries or affiliates  certain rights to registration under the
     Securities  Act of 1933,  as amended,  with respect to the Warrants and all
     shares of Common Stock  issuable upon exercise  thereof (the  "Registration
     Rights Agreement"). Subject to certain limitations, the Registration Rights
     Agreement provides that the Investors and their subsidiaries and affiliates
     have  the  right  to  make  three  demand  registration  requests  ("Demand
     Registrations") of the Company and can make an unlimited number of requests
     for piggyback registrations (each, a "Piggyback Registration"). A Piggyback
     Registration  will not  relieve the  Company of its  obligations  to effect
     Demand  Registrations.  The  Company  has agreed to pay all  expenses  with
     respect to any Demand Registration or Piggyback Registration other than any
     underwriting  discounts and  commissions  and any transfer  taxes,  if any,
     attributable  to the sale by an  Investor or any of their  subsidiaries  or
     affiliates of any securities so registered.

DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
Until November 11, 2000, directors and officers were prohibited,  under New York
Insurance Law, from acquiring Company stock. Thereafter,  directors and officers
have acquired shares of Common Stock in accordance with New York law.

The following  table sets forth  certain  information  regarding the  beneficial
ownership  of Common  Stock as of March 1, 2002 by each  director  and  director
nominee and the Company's Chief Executive Officer and the four other most highly
compensated  executive  officers of the Company who served in such capacities as
of December 31, 2001 (collectively,  the "named executive  officers") and by all
directors and executive  officers as a group.  Unless  otherwise  indicated in a
footnote,  each person listed in the table  possesses sole voting and investment
power with respect to the shares shown in the table to be owned by that person.

As of  March 1,  2002,  the  directors,  the  director  nominees  and the  named
executive officers of the Company:

o    owned beneficially,  directly or indirectly, the number of shares of Common
     Stock indicated under "Shares Beneficially Owned;"

o    held options,  exercisable  within 60 days after that date, to purchase the
     number of shares of Common  Stock  indicated  in the  applicable  footnotes
     below; and

o    held units  equivalent  to the number of shares of Common  Stock  indicated
     under "Benefit Plan Shares  Beneficially  Owned" pursuant to the Investment
     Plan Supplement for Employees and Field Underwriters of MONY Life (the

                                       3


     "Investment  Plan  Supplement"),  the Excess  Benefit Plan for Employees of
     MONY Life (the "Excess Plan"),  and/or the Deferred  Compensation  Plan for
     Directors of MONY Life (the "Directors Deferred Plan").


As of March 1, 2002, no such person  beneficially owned more than one percent of
the outstanding  Common Stock;  all directors and executive  officers as a group
beneficially   owned  1,049,845  shares  of  Common  Stock,   including  options
exercisable  within 60 days after that date to purchase 466,441 shares of Common
Stock and the  equivalent  of 164,107  shares of Common  Stock  allocated to the
unitized  interests in the benefit plan accounts of such directors and executive
officers.  Together all such shares amounted to 2.1% of the  outstanding  Common
Stock as of that date.



                                                                              BENEFIT
                                                        SHARES              PLANS SHARES            TOTAL NUMBER
               NAME OF                               BENEFICIALLY           BENEFICIALLY              OF SHARES
          BENEFICIAL OWNER                               OWNED                OWNED(1)           BENEFICIALLY OWNED
          ----------------                         ----------------         ------------          -----------------
                                                                                            
Tom H. Barrett ..................................        1,384(2)               2,454                    3,838
David L. Call ...................................        1,634(2)(3)               --                    1,634
Richard Daddario ................................       80,507(4)               9,512                   90,019
G. Robert Durham ................................        1,461(2)                  --                    1,461
James B. Farley .................................        1,384(2)                  --                    1,384
Samuel J. Foti ..................................      145,266(5)              51,098                  196,364
Robert Holland, Jr. .............................        1,551(2)(6)           10,379                   11,930
James L. Johnson ................................        1,407(2)                  --                    1,407
Frederick W. Kanner .............................        2,834(7)               1,296                    4,130
Robert R. Kiley .................................        1,384(2)                  66                    1,450
Kenneth M. Levine ...............................       82,910(8)               8,141                   91,051
Jane C. Pfeiffer ................................        2,395(2)                  --                    2,395
Michael I. Roth .................................      215,075(9)              48,833                  263,908
Thomas C. Theobald ..............................        1,450(2)               3,596                    5,046
David M. Thomas .................................           --                     --                       --
Victor Ugolyn ...................................       37,287(10)              9,668                   46,955
All directors and executive officers
 as a group (25 persons) ........................      885,738                164,107                1,049,845(11)


----------

(1)  Indicates  Common Stock  equivalent  of unitized  interests  held under the
     Retirement  and  Investment  Plan  Trust  of MONY  Life  and  the  Deferred
     Compensation  Trust  of MONY  Life.  This  represents  the  employees'  and
     non-employee  directors' deferral of compensation and Company contributions
     under the Investment  Plan  Supplement,  a  tax-qualified  401(k) plan, the
     Excess Plan and the Directors Deferred Plan.

(2)  Includes 550 restricted  shares granted on January 11, 2000, 418 restricted
     shares  granted on January 17, 2001 and 416  restricted  shares  granted on
     January 16, 2002.

(3)  Includes 250 shares owned in an IRA by Mary G. Call, Mr. Call's spouse.

(4)  Includes  (i) 23,473  restricted  shares  subject to  certain  vesting  and
     forfeiture  provisions,  (ii) 56,950 shares subject to options  exercisable
     within 60 days after  March 1, 2002 and (iii) 77 shares  owned by  Patricia
     Daddario,   Mr.  Daddario's  spouse.  Mr.  Daddario  disclaims   beneficial
     ownership of the shares owned by his spouse.

(5)  Includes  (i) 44,179  restricted  shares  subject to  certain  vesting  and
     forfeiture  provisions,  (ii) 100,500 shares subject to options exercisable
     within 60 days after March 1, 2002 and (iii) 165 shares  owned by Mary Jane
     Foti, Mr. Foti's spouse.  Mr. Foti  disclaims  beneficial  ownership of the
     shares owned by his spouse.

(6)  Includes 7 shares owned by WorkPlace  Integrators.  Mr. Holland  previously
     owned WorkPlace Integrators.

(7)  Includes  418  restricted  shares  granted  on  January  17,  2001  and 416
     restricted shares granted on January 16, 2002.

(8)  Includes  (i) 25,803  restricted  shares  subject to  certain  vesting  and
     forfeiture provisions and (ii) 56,950 shares subject to options exercisable
     within 60 days after March 1, 2002.



                                       4


(9)  Includes  (i) 56,520  restricted  shares  subject to  certain  vesting  and
     forfeiture  provisions,  (ii) 158,120 shares subject to options exercisable
     within  60 days  after  March 1, 2002 and  (iii)  428  shares  owned by the
     Michael I. Roth  Irrevocable  Trust, an irrevocable life insurance trust of
     which Mr.  Roth's three  children  are  beneficiaries.  Mr. Roth  disclaims
     beneficial ownership of the shares owned by the trust.

(10) Includes  (i) 21,506  restricted  shares  subject to  certain  vesting  and
     forfeiture provisions and (ii) 15,745 shares subject to options exercisable
     within 60 days after March 1, 2002.

(11) Includes  11,687 shares of Common Stock for which  beneficial  ownership is
     disclaimed by certain directors and executive officers.

                        PROPOSAL 1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

The Company's  Board of Directors  consists of three  classes of directors:  one
class to hold office for a term expiring at the Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders
to be held on May 15, 2002,  another class to hold office for a term expiring at
the Annual Meeting of Shareholders to be held in 2003, and another class to hold
office for a term expiring at the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  to be held in
2004,  with the members of each class to hold office until their  successors are
duly elected and qualified.  At each Annual Meeting of the  Shareholders  of the
Company,  the  successors  to the class of directors  whose term expires at that
meeting  shall be  elected  to hold  office  for a term  expiring  at the Annual
Meeting  of  Shareholders  held in the third  year  following  the year of their
election.

Five  directors  will be elected at the Annual  Meeting for terms  ending in May
2005 or until their respective successors shall have been elected and qualified.
All of the  nominees are at the present  time  directors  of the Company,  whose
current  terms will expire at the 2002  Annual  Meeting.  If any nominee  should
become unable to serve, the persons named as proxies on the proxy card will vote
for the person or persons the Board  recommends,  if any.  The Board knows of no
reason why any nominee will be unavailable or unable to serve.

Set forth  below is  information  about  each  director  nominee  and each other
director, including business positions held during at least the past five years,
age,  other  directorships  held and  periods of  service  as a director  of the
Company and MONY Life.

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THE NOMINEES NAMED
BELOW.

G. ROBERT DURHAM, 73 -- Director Nominee
Mr. Durham has been a Director of the Company  since August  1998*.  He has also
been a Director of MONY Life since June 1988.  Mr.  Durham  retired  from Walter
Industries,   Inc.,  a  home  building  and  financing,  natural  resources  and
industrial  manufacturing company, in May 1996, after serving as Chairman of the
Board  and Chief  Executive  Officer  from June 1991 to May 1996.  Prior to that
time, Mr. Durham held various executive  management  positions with Phelps Dodge
Corporation,  a mining company, serving as President,  Chairman of the Board and
Chief  Executive  Officer  until his  retirement  in June 1989. He serves on the
board of directors of The FINOVA Group, Inc.


JAMES L. JOHNSON, 74 -- Director Nominee
Mr.  Johnson has been a Director of the Company since August 1998*.  He has also
been a Director  of MONY Life  since  October  1986.  Mr.  Johnson  is  Chairman
Emeritus of GTE  Corporation,  a  telecommunications  company,  having served as
Chairman and Chief  Executive  Officer  from April 1988 to May 1992.  He is also
Non-Executive  Chairman  of  the  Board  of  CellStar  Corporation,  a  wireless
communications  company,  since July 2001.  Prior to that time, Mr. Johnson held
various executive management positions with GTE Corporation.  Mr. Johnson serves
on the board of directors of CellStar Corporation,  Harte-Hanks  Communications,
Inc., and Walter Industries, Inc.


FREDERICK W. KANNER, 58 -- Director Nominee
Mr. Kanner has been a Director of the Company since March 2000. He has also been
a director of MONY Life since March 2000.  Mr. Kanner is a member of the firm of
Dewey Ballantine LLP, an international law firm  headquartered in New York City,
since October 1976. He serves on the Board of Trustees of the Lawyers'  Alliance
for New York and the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.


KENNETH M. LEVINE, 55 -- Director Nominee
Mr. Levine has been a Director,  Executive Vice  President and Chief  Investment
Officer of the  Company  since  1997**.  He has also been a Director  (since May
1994) and Executive Vice President  (since  February 1990) and Chief  Investment
Officer  (since January 1991) of MONY Life. Mr. Levine is also a director of the
following  subsidiaries  of MONY Life:  MONY Life  Insurance  Company of America
(since July 1991),  MONY Series Fund, Inc. (since December 1991), 1740 Advisers,
Inc.  (since  December  1989),  MONY Benefits  Management  Corp.  (formerly MONY
Funding,  Inc.) (since October 1991), MONY Realty Partners,  Inc. (since October
1991), 1740 Ventures, Inc. (since October 1991), MONY Agricultural Investment



                                       5


Advisers, Inc. (since October 2001), MONY Asset Management,  Inc. (since October
2001),  MONY  Capital  Management,  Inc.  (since  October  2001) and MONY Realty
Capital,  Inc.  (since October 2001).  He also served as MONY Life's Senior Vice
President--  Pensions (from January 1988 to February 1990).  Prior to that time,
Mr. Levine held various management positions within MONY Life.


DAVID M. THOMAS, 52 -- Director Nominee
Mr. Thomas has been a Director of the Company since March 2002. He has also been
a Director of MONY Life since March 2002. Mr. Thomas is filling a vacancy on the
Company's Board of Directors. Mr. Thomas is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
of IMS Health, a leading provider of information solutions to the pharmaceutical
and healthcare industries,  since November,  2000. From 1998 to 2000, Mr. Thomas
served as Senior Vice  President  and Group  Executive  at IBM,  an  information
technologies  company.  Prior to that time,  Mr. Thomas held various  management
positions  with IBM since 1972.  Mr.  Thomas serves on the Board of Directors of
IMS Health,  Fortune Brands, Inc., Trizetto Corporation and Cognizant Technology
Solutions.


THE FOLLOWING DIRECTORS SERVE FOR TERMS THAT EXPIRE IN 2003:

TOM H. BARRETT, 71
Mr.  Barrett has been a Director of the Company since August 1998*.  He has also
been a  Director  of MONY Life  since  July  1990.  Mr.  Barrett is a Partner in
American Industrial Partners, a private investment partnership,  since 1992. Mr.
Barrett retired from The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company in December 1993,  after
serving as Chairman of the Board,  President  & Chief  Executive  Officer of The
Goodyear  Tire & Rubber  Company  from April 1989 to July 1991 and  President  &
Chief Executive Officer from December 1988 to April 1989.

DAVID L. CALL, 70
Dr. Call has been a Director of the Company since August 1998*. He has also been
a Director  of MONY Life since  January  1993.  Dr.  Call  joined the faculty of
Cornell  University  in 1963. He became Dean of the College of  Agriculture  and
Life Sciences in 1978.  Dr. Call has been Dean Emeritus  since his retirement in
1995. He also serves as a small business consultant.

JAMES B. FARLEY, 71
Mr. Farley has been a Director of the Company  since August  1998*.  He has also
been a Director of MONY Life since October 1988.  Mr. Farley joined MONY Life as
President and Chief  Operating  Officer in October 1988. He held the position of
Chairman of the Board,  Chief Executive Officer and President from April 1989 to
January  1991,  and  Chairman  and Chief  Executive  Officer  from April 1991 to
January  1993.  From  January 1993 to July 1993 he was Chairman of the Board and
retired from MONY Life in January 1994.  Prior to joining MONY Life in 1988, Mr.
Farley was Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer of Booz,  Allen & Hamilton from
1972 to 1985 and Senior Chairman from 1985 to 1988. Booz, Allen & Hamilton is an
international  management and technology  consulting  firm. Mr. Farley serves on
the board of directors of Ashland, Inc. and Harrah's Entertainment,  Inc. and is
a Trustee of the Forster Trust.


SAMUEL J. FOTI, 50
Mr.  Foti has been a  Director,  President  and Chief  Operating  Officer of the
Company  since  1997**.  He is  President  and Chief  Operating  Officer  (since
February  1994) of MONY Life and has been a Director  since  January 1993. He is
also President and Chief  Operating  Officer of MONY Life  Insurance  Company of
America  (since  February  1994).  Mr.  Foti  is a  director  of  the  following
subsidiaries of MONY Life: MONY Life Insurance Company of America (since October
1989), MONY Brokerage,  Inc. (since January 1990), MONY International  Holdings,
Inc.  (since October 1994),  MONY Life Insurance  Company of the Americas,  Ltd.
(since December 1994) and MONY Bank & Trust Company of the Americas, Ltd. (since
December 1994). He has also served as MONY Life's Executive Vice President (from
January  1991 to February  1994) and Senior Vice  President  (from April 1989 to
January 1991).  Mr. Foti serves on the board of directors of Enterprise Group of
Funds,  Inc.  and  Enterprise  Accumulation  Trust.  He is also a Trustee of The
American College, where he served as Chair of the Board of Trustees from January
2000 to January 2002. He previously served on the board of directors of the Life
Insurance  Marketing  and  Research  Association  (LIMRA),  where he  served  as
Chairman from October 1996 through October 1997.


JANE C. PFEIFFER, 69
Mrs.  Pfeiffer has been a Director of the Company  since August  1998*.  She has
also been a Director  of MONY Life since  November  1988.  Mrs.  Pfeiffer  is an
independent  management  consultant.  Mrs.  Pfeiffer  serves  on  the  board  of
directors of Ashland, Inc., International Paper Company and J.C. Penney Company,
Inc.  She is a  trustee  of the  University  of Notre  Dame and a member  of The
Council on Foreign Relations.


                                       6


THE FOLLOWING DIRECTORS SERVE FOR TERMS THAT EXPIRE IN 2004:

ROBERT HOLLAND, JR., 61
Mr.  Holland has been a Director of the Company since August 1998*.  He has also
been Director of MONY Life since May 1990. Mr. Holland is a business consultant.
Mr. Holland was the owner and Chief Executive Officer of WorkPlace  Integrators,
an office  furniture  dealership  in Southeast  Michigan,  from December 1996 to
April  2001.  Prior to that  time,  Mr.  Holland  was the  President  and  Chief
Executive  Officer of Ben & Jerry's Homemade,  Inc., an ice cream company,  from
February 1995 to October 1996, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Rokher-J,
Inc., a business  development  services company,  from 1991 to 1995, Chairman of
the  Board of  Gilreath  Manufacturing  Company,  a  plastic  injection  molding
manufacturing  company,  from  1990 to  1991  and  Vice  President  of  Business
Development  of Gilreath  Manufacturing  Company from 1988 to 1990.  Mr. Holland
serves on the board of directors of Tricon  Global  Restaurants,  Inc.,  Lexmark
International, Carver Bank Corp., Advanced Product Development, Mazaruni Granite
Products  (Guyana).  He also serves on the Ethnic  Advisory Board of PepsiCo and
the Advisory Board of Boardroom Consultants.

ROBERT R. KILEY, 66
Mr.  Kiley has been a Director of the Company  since August  1998*.  He has also
been  Director  of MONY  Life  since  November  1995.  Mr.  Kiley  has  been the
Commissioner of Transport for London since January 2001. Prior to that time, Mr.
Kiley was President and Chief Executive Officer of the New York City Partnership
and Chamber of Commerce,  Inc. from May 1995 to January 2001. Mr. Kiley had been
a  Principal  of Kohlberg & Co.  from April 1994 to April  1999.  Mr.  Kiley was
President and Chief  Executive  Officer of Fischback  Corp.,  an electrical  and
mechanical  contracting company,  from January 1991 to October 1994 and Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer of the Metropolitan  Transportation Authority of New
York from November 1983 to December 1990.


MICHAEL I. ROTH, 56
Mr. Roth has been a Director,  Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
of the Company since  1997**.  He is Chairman of the Board (since July 1993) and
Chief  Executive  Officer  (since  January  1993)  of MONY  Life  and has been a
Director  since  May  1991.  Mr.  Roth  is  also a  director  of  the  following
subsidiaries  of MONY Life:  MONY Life Insurance  Company of America (since July
1991) and 1740 Advisers,  Inc. (since December 1992). He has also served as MONY
Life's  President and Chief Executive  Officer (from January 1993 to July 1993),
President  and Chief  Operating  Officer (from January 1991 to January 1993) and
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (from March 1989 to January
1991). Mr. Roth serves on the board of directors of the American Council of Life
Insurance,  The  Life  Insurance  Council  of New  York,  Insurance  Marketplace
Standards  Association,  Enterprise  Foundation (a charitable  foundation  which
develops  housing  and  which is not  affiliated  with the  Enterprise  Group of
Funds),  Metropolitan  Development Association of Syracuse and Central New York,
Enterprise Group of Funds, Inc.,  Enterprise  Accumulation  Trust, Pitney Bowes,
Inc., Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts Leadership Committee, New York City
Partnership   and  Chamber  of  Commerce,   Committee  to  Encourage   Corporate
Philanthropy,   The  Twin  Towers  Fund,  New  York  City  Investment  Fund  and
Interpublic  Group of Companies.  Mr. Roth also serves on the Board of Governors
of the United Way of Tri-State.


THOMAS C. THEOBALD, 64
Mr.  Theobald has been a Director of the Company since August 1998*. He has also
been a Director of MONY Life since May 1990. Mr. Theobald is a managing director
of William  Blair  Capital  Partners,  L.L.C.,  a private  equity  group,  since
September  1994.  Prior to that time, Mr.  Theobald was Chairman of the Board of
Continental  Bank from August 1987 to August 1994.  Mr.  Theobald  serves on the
board of  directors of Anixter  International,  Inc.,  Xerox  Corp.,  Jones Lang
LaSalle, Inc., and Liberty Funds.


----------

  *  This Director was elected in  anticipation  of the  demutualization  of The
     Mutual Life Insurance  Company of New York,  the  predecessor of MONY Life,
     that was  completed  in 1998.  Directors of MONY Life served as Trustees on
     the Board of Trustees of The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, the
     predecessor  of MONY  Life,  prior to the  demutualization  for the  period
     indicated.

 **  The Company was incorporated under the name MONYCO,  Inc. on June 24, 1997,
     as a wholly owned  subsidiary of MONY Life.  This Director was appointed in
     connection with the original incorporation of the Company.

DIRECTOR RETIREMENT POLICY
For its  members,  the  Board  of  Directors  will  continue  to  adhere  to the
retirement  policy adopted by MONY Life for its Board.  Pursuant to that policy,
directors  serve  until the  attainment  of age 70. The only  exception  to this
policy is for  directors who were elected as Board members of MONY Life prior to
May 1, 1989, who are scheduled to retire on the first day of the month following
the  attainment  of age 73. In  addition,  to maintain the  continued  guidance,
leadership  and expertise of the members of the Board of Directors and the Audit
Committee  during  the  initial  period  after  the  demutualization,  directors
scheduled to



                                       7


retire in 2000  will be able to serve an  additional  two  years  and  directors
scheduled  to retire in June,  2001,  May,  2002 and June,  2002 will be able to
serve an additional two years or until their  successors  have been duly elected
and qualified.


                          BOARD MEETINGS AND COMMITTEES

The Company's  Board of Directors held nine meetings  during 2001. Each Director
attended at least 75% of the total  number of meetings of the Board of Directors
and the Committees on which he or she served during the year.

The Board of Directors has the following three standing committees.

AUDIT COMMITTEE.  The Audit Committee's primary  responsibilities are to monitor
the  integrity  of the  Company's  financial  reporting  process  and systems of
internal controls;  to monitor the independence and performance of the Company's
independent auditors and internal auditing  department;  to provide an avenue of
communication among the independent auditors,  management, the internal auditing
department  and the  Board  of  Directors;  and to  review  areas  of  potential
significant  financial  risk  for  the  Company.  The  Audit  Committee  is also
responsible for, among other things, reviewing the annual audit of the Company's
financial  statements before filing and distribution and reviewing the Company's
quarterly  financial  results before filing or  distribution  and, in each case,
discussing  significant issues with management,  the Company's internal auditors
and  the  Company's  independent  auditors.  Its  membership  is  restricted  to
directors who are not employees of the Company or its affiliates. The members of
the Committee are: Tom H. Barrett (Chairman), G. Robert Durham, James B. Farley,
Robert  R.  Kiley  and  Thomas  C.  Theobald,  each of whom is an  "independent"
director in accordance with applicable New York Stock Exchange requirements. The
Audit Committee  operates under a written charter,  a copy of which was appended
to the Proxy Statement  furnished to shareholders in connection with last year's
Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  of the Company.  The Audit  Committee met five
times in 2001.

HUMAN RESOURCES  COMMITTEE.  The function of the Human Resources Committee is to
oversee  the  administration  of the  Company's  compensation  plans and to make
determinations with respect to compensation of officers, directors and employees
of the Company;  to nominate  candidates for election by the shareholders to the
Board of Directors or to fill vacancies on the Board of Directors;  to recommend
the establishment,  authority, size and membership of committees of the Board of
Directors;  to evaluate the performance of executive officers of the Company; to
recommend to the Board of  Directors  the  selection  and base  compensation  of
executive  officers of the Company;  to recommend to the Board of Directors  any
plan to issue  options to its officers and  employees for the purchase of shares
of stock; and, in some cases, to make final determinations, sometimes subject to
ratification by the full Board of Directors,  concerning incentive  compensation
intended to qualify as "performance-based  compensation" under Section 162(m) of
the  Internal  Revenue  Code (the  "Code").  Its  membership  is  restricted  to
Directors who are not employees of the Company or its affiliates. The members of
the Human  Resources  Committee  are:  James L.  Johnson  (Chairman),  G. Robert
Durham,  James B. Farley and Robert Holland,  Jr. The Human Resources  Committee
will consider nominees  recommended by security holders.  The procedure for such
nominations is described below under "2003 Meeting of  Shareholders."  The Human
Resources Committee met five times in 2001.

PUBLIC AFFAIRS  COMMITTEE.  The function of the Public  Affairs  Committee is to
review  policies,  programs and practices that are consistent with the Company's
social  obligation to its employees,  society and especially the  communities of
its major  locations.  The members of the Public Affairs  Committee are: Jane C.
Pfeiffer (Chairperson), David L. Call, Robert Holland, Jr., Frederick W. Kanner,
Robert R. Kiley and Thomas C. Theobald.  The Public  Affairs  Committee met four
times in 2001.


                             AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

The Audit Committee of The MONY Group Inc. (the "Audit  Committee") is comprised
of five  independent  directors and operates under a written  Charter adopted by
the Board of Directors on May 17, 2000. In its  corporate  oversight  role,  the
Committee  reviews the Company's  financial  reporting  process on behalf of the
Board.  Management has the primary  responsibility for the financial  statements
and the reporting process, including the system of internal controls.

The Audit  Committee held five meetings  during 2001. The meetings were designed
to facilitate open communication between the Audit Committee, management and the
Company's   independent   public   accountants,    PricewaterhouseCoopers    LLP
("PricewaterhouseCoopers").  The Audit  Committee  reviewed  and  discussed  the
audited    consolidated     financial    statements    with    management    and
PricewaterhouseCoopers during these meetings.

The  Audit  Committee  discussed  with  PricewaterhouseCoopers   matters  to  be
discussed by Statement on Auditing  Standards No. 61  (Communication  with Audit
Committees).  PricewaterhouseCoopers  also  provided to the Audit  Committee the
written  disclosures  and the letter  required by  Independence  Standards Board
Standard No. 1 (Independence  Discussions with Audit Committees),  and the Audit
Committee  discussed  with   PricewaterhouseCoopers   their  independence  under
Independence Standards Board Standard No.1.



                                       8


It  should  be noted  that the  Company  contracted  PricewaterhouseCoopers  for
various  engagements  during the course of 2001 and the  following  represents a
brief schedule of the professional fees paid:

                  Audit Fees ...................................      $1,512,000
                  Financial Information Systems Design and
                     Implementation Fees .......................      $        0
                  Other Fees-- Audit Related ...................      $  613,100
                  Other Fees-- Consulting Related ..............      $2,289,387

Included in the "Other Fees -- Audit  Related"  category are fees for regulatory
filings in addition to  statutory  audits of certain  subsidiary  organizations.
Some of the  principal  items  covered  within  the  "Other  Fees --  Consulting
Related" caption include cost containment  projects and various business process
reviews.  It should be noted that while  PricewaterhouseCoopers  was  engaged to
perform these  non-audit  services,  the Company also utilized other  consulting
firms for major projects,  including  Deloitte and Touche for SAP implementation
and IBM for  E-Business  consulting.  The Audit  Committee has  determined  that
PricewaterhouseCoopers'  provision of the consulting  related services  itemized
above is compatible with maintaining its independence.

Based  upon the  reviews  and  discussions  noted  above,  the  Audit  Committee
recommended  to the Board of Directors that the audited  consolidated  financial
statements be included in the Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2001 for filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Respectfully submitted,

                                        THE AUDIT COMMITTEE OF
                                        THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                                        Tom H. Barrett, Chairman
                                        G. Robert Durham
                                        James B. Farley
                                        Robert R. Kiley
                                        Thomas C. Theobald















                                       9


                         EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

The following table sets forth certain information concerning total compensation
for  services  rendered  in all  capacities  awarded or paid by MONY Life to the
named executive officers for services rendered to the Company during each of the
last three fiscal years.

None of the officers  listed below  received any cash  compensation  during 2001
from the Company. All cash compensation received,  earned or accrued by officers
was paid by MONY Life.



                                                                                           LONG-TERM
                                                      ANNUAL COMPENSATION                COMPENSATION
                                            --------------------------------------- -----------------------
            (A)                      (B)        (C)          (D)           (E)          (F)         (G)          (H)
                                                                                     NUMBER OF
                                                                                    SECURITIES
                                                                          OTHER     UNDERLYING
                                                                         ANNUAL       OPTIONS      LTIP       ALL OTHER
                                              SALARY        BONUS    COMPENSATION(1)  GRANTED   PAYOUTS(2) COMPENSATION(3)
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION         YEAR        ($)          ($)           ($)          (#)         ($)          ($)
-------------------------          ------   -----------  -----------  ------------- ----------- -----------  -----------
                                                                                         
Michael I. Roth,                    2001      950,000            0      175,333            --    1,479,167    143,163
    Chairman of the Board and       2000      900,000    1,100,000      119,837            --    1,041,667    148,307
    Chief Executive Officer         1999      875,000      875,000      125,569       236,000      964,169    155,512
Samuel J. Foti,                     2001      730,000            0      136,470            --    1,062,500    108,384
    President and Chief             2000      705,000      800,000      121,852            --      770,833    110,599
    Operating Officer               1999      655,000      600,000      113,681       150,000      695,833    113,311
Kenneth M. Levine,                  2001      500,000            0       60,658            --      562,500     49,843
    Executive Vice President        2000      475,000      450,000       60,366            --      479,167     69,785
    and Chief Investment Officer    1999      450,000      425,000       54,010        85,000      494,167     71,679
Richard Daddario,                   2001      450,000            0       62,552            --      470,833     64,360
    Executive Vice President        2000      400,000      375,000       57,340            --      416,667     68,541
    and Chief Financial Officer     1999      375,000      325,000       51,386        85,000      396,667     69,667
Victor Ugolyn,                      2001      550,000            0       29,997            --      225,000     55,183
    Chairman, President & Chief     2000      500,000      450,000       29,417            --      177,083     64,157
    Executive Officer, Enterprise   1999      450,000      425,000       26,443        23,500      140,583     65,011
    Capital Management, Inc.


----------
(1)  Includes  payments to Messrs.  Roth,  Foti,  Levine,  Daddario  and Ugolyn,
     respectively, for interest paid in 2001 with respect to awards made for the
     1996-1998 and the 1997-1999  performance cycles under MONY Life's Long-Term
     Performance  Plan (the  "Long  Term  Performance  Plan") in the  amounts of
     $56,236,   $44,578,  $25,189,  $21,323,  and  $9,314.  Also  includes  2001
     financial counseling for Mr. Roth of $53,307.37.

(2)  Includes  2001  payments  of awards  under  Long-Term  Performance  Plan to
     Messrs.  Roth,  Foti,  Levine,  Daddario and Ugolyn,  respectively,  of (i)
     $750,000,  $500,000  $250,000,  $200,000 and  $100,000  with respect to the
     1998-2000 performance cycle, (ii) $375,000,  $250,000,  $125,000, $125,000,
     and $75,000 with respect to the 1997 - 1999  performance  cycle,  and (iii)
     $354,167,  $312,500,  $187,500,  $145,833,  and $50,000 with respect to the
     1996 - 1998 performance cycle.

(3)  Includes 2001 payments to Messrs. Roth, Foti, Levine,  Daddario and Ugolyn,
     respectively,  of (i) the part of  premium  paid by the  Company  for split
     dollar life insurance in the amounts of $72,776,  $55,864, $17,246, $38,344
     and $25,183, (ii) contributions to the Company's tax-qualified plans in the
     amounts of $2,449,  $2,522,  $5,687, $3,150 and $5,100, (iii) contributions
     to the  Company's  non-qualified  plan in the amounts of $67,938,  $49,998,
     $26,910, $22,866 and $24,900.

                        OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

No stock options were granted to the named executive officers in 2001.





                                       10



OPTION EXERCISES AND FISCAL YEAR END VALUES

The following table sets forth information with respect to the exercise of stock
options by the named  executive  officers  during the fiscal year ended December
31, 2001,  the number of unexercised  stock options held by the named  executive
officers on December  31, 2001 and the value of  in-the-money  stock  options on
December 31, 2001.

                 AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                        AND FISCAL YEAR END OPTION VALUE



                                                                                    UNEXERCISED AT
                                EXERCISED IN 2001                                  DECEMBER 31, 2001
                         ------------------------------          -----------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                      VALUE OF
                                                                   NUMBER OF SECURITIES              UNEXERCISED
                                                                  UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED            IN-THE-MONEY
                                                                     OPTIONS AT FISCAL            OPTIONS AT FISCAL
                                                                         YEAR END                  YEAR END ($)(1)
                                                VALUE
                         SHARES ACQUIRED      REALIZED
NAME                       ON EXERCISE           ($)            EXERCISABLE UNEXERCISABLE    EXERCISABLE  UNEXERCISABLE
-----                    --------------       --------          ----------- -------------    -----------  ------------
                                                                                          
Michael I. Roth ........       0                 $0                158,120      77,880         $643,548     $316,972
Samuel J. Foti .........       0                 $0                100,500      49,500         $409,035     $201,465
Kenneth M. Levine ......       0                 $0                 56,950      28,050         $231,787     $114,164
Richard Daddario .......       0                 $0                 56,950      28,050         $231,787     $114,164
Victor Ugolyn ..........       0                 $0                 15,745       7,755         $ 64,082     $ 31,563



----------

(1)  Value of options is based upon the  difference  between the grant prices of
     all options awarded in 1999 and the December 31, 2001 closing price for the
     Company's stock of $34.57 per share.

LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN AWARDS

The following table sets forth  information  with respect to awards to the named
executive officers in the fiscal year ended December 31, 2001.

             LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN -- AWARDS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2001



                                                                        ESTIMATED FUTURE PAYOUTS UNDER
                                                                          NON-STOCK PRICE-BASED PLANS
                                                               -----------------------------------------------
        (A)                    (B)                (C)                (D)              (E)               (F)
                                              PERFORMANCE
                            NUMBER OF          OR OTHER
                        SHARES, UNITS OR     PERIOD UNTIL
                          OTHER RIGHTS        MATURATION          THRESHOLD         TARGET            MAXIMUM
NAME                           (#)             OR PAYOUT           ($/SH)           ($/ SH)           ($/SH)
----                      -------------      ------------        ----------       ----------        ----------
                                                                                     
Michael I. Roth .........   17,000(1)          2001-2003          $510,000         $1,700,000       $4,250,000
                            49,650(2)          2001-2003            24,825             49,650           49,650

Samuel J. Foti ..........   15,000(1)          2001-2003          $450,000         $1,500,000       $3,750,000
                            38,900(2)          2001-2003            19,450             38,900           38,900

Kenneth M. Levine .......    5,000(1)          2001-2003          $150,000           $500,000       $1,250,000
                            25,000(2)          2001-2003            12,500             25,000           25,000

Richard Daddario ........    5,000(1)          2001-2003          $150,000           $500,000       $1,250,000
                            22,000(2)          2001-2003            11,000             22,000           22,000

Victor Ugolyn ...........    5,000(1)          2001-2003          $150,000           $500,000       $1,250,000
                            20,000(2)          2001-2003            10,000             20,000           20,000


----------
(1)  Under the Long-Term  Performance Plan the Human Resources  Committee of the
     Board of Directors  makes awards of units to the named  executive  officers
     and other  designated  officers of the Company and  establishes  three-year
     performance goals for the Company. At the end of the three-year performance
     cycle,  such shares  entitle the  recipients  to cash  payouts,  over three
     years, if and to the extent that the Company has achieved the predetermined
     performance goals.

                                       11


(2)  Under MONY Life's  Restricted Stock Ownership Plan (the  "Restricted  Stock
     Ownership  Plan") the Human  Resources  Committee of the Board of Directors
     made awards of restricted  stock to the named executive  officers and other
     designated officers of the Company.  These shares vest over three years and
     the restrictions  will lapse only if the Company  achieves  pre-established
     stock  price  appreciation  performance  criteria.  If the  pre-established
     performance  criteria are not met at the end of the three-year  period, the
     shares will be cancelled.  The market value of the Company's  common shares
     on the date of the restricted-share grant was $36.23 per share.

RETIREMENT PLAN INFORMATION

The following table sets forth the estimated annual retirement  benefits payable
at  normal  retirement  age  (generally  age 65) to a person  retiring  with the
indicated  final  average pay and years of credited  service on a straight  life
annuity basis,  under the Retirement  Income Security Plan for Employees of MONY
Life (the  "Retirement  Plan"),  as  supplemented  by the Excess  Plan,  each as
described below:



                                                     ESTIMATED ANNUAL BENEFITS OF RETIREMENT
                                                   WITH INDICATED YEARS OF CREDITED SERVICE(1)
                                  ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINAL AVERAGE PAY                  10            15             20             25           30             35
--------------                  ---------     ---------      ---------      ---------   -----------    -----------
                                                                                      
$  500,000                      $ 72,300       $108,450       $144,600      $180,750     $  216,900     $  253,050
$1,000,000                      $147,300       $220,950       $294,600      $368,250     $  441,900     $  515,550
$1,500,000                      $222,300       $333,450       $444,600      $555,750     $  666,900     $  778,050
$2,000,000                      $297,300       $445,950       $594,600      $743,250     $  891,900     $1,040,550
$2,500,000                      $372,300       $558,450       $744,600      $930,750     $1,116,900     $1,303,050


----------
(1)  Estimated  retirement benefit described above does not include the value of
     the executive's "employer contribution account."

The annual  retirement  benefit under the Retirement Plan and the Excess Plan is
generally  equal to the product of (a)(i) a percentage of an executive's  "final
average pay" in excess of his or her "covered  compensation"  (i.e., the average
of the  social  security  taxable  wage base for the 35 years up to the date the
executive  attains  social  security  retirement  age),  plus (ii) a  percentage
(depending  upon  the  executive's  social  security   retirement  age)  of  the
executive's   "final  average  pay"  not  in  excess  of  his  or  her  "covered
compensation,"  and (b) the  executive's  years of  credited  service  up to 35.
"Final average pay" is defined as the highest average annual  "compensation"  of
an executive for any 36 consecutive months in the 120 months of service prior to
the  executive's  retirement.  "Compensation"  used to determine the  retirement
benefit  under the  Retirement  Plan and the Excess Plan  consists of the salary
paid to an executive,  including  incentive  compensation  and salary  deferrals
pursuant to Section 125 and Section 401(k) plans and Deferred  Compensation Plan
for Key  Employees,  but excluding  expense and tuition  reimbursement,  amounts
payable  under the  Long-Term  Performance  Plan,  fringe  benefits,  group life
insurance premiums,  moving expenses,  prizes,  hiring and referral bonuses, and
disability   payments.   Such  "compensation"  is  generally  the  same  as  the
compensation  reflected  above in columns (C) and (D) of the  Executive  Summary
Compensation  Table.  The Excess  Plan is  designed  to provide  benefits  which
eligible  employees would have received under the Retirement Plan but for limits
applicable  under the  Retirement  Plan.  The estimated  "final  average pay" of
Messrs.  Roth, Foti,  Levine,  Daddario and Ugolyn under the Retirement Plan and
the Excess Plan as of December 31, 2001 (assuming retirement as of such date) is
$1,841,667,  $1,330,000,  $883,333, $727,000 and $908,333, respectively, and the
estimated  years of credited  service under the  Retirement  Plan and the Excess
Plan as of such date for each of such named executive officers is 13, 13, 29, 12
and 11 years,  respectively.  These benefits are not reduced by Social  Security
benefits nor any benefits  derived from the qualified and  non-qualified  401(k)
plans.

EMPLOYMENT AND CHANGE IN CONTROL AGREEMENTS

MONY Life has entered into employment  agreements (the "Employment  Agreements")
with each of Messrs. Roth, Foti, Levine, Daddario, and Ugolyn. The current terms
of the Employment  Agreements are effective  through December 31, 2002, and will
automatically  be extended for successive  one-year terms unless MONY Life gives
notice to the executive  (by the preceding  September 30) that it will not renew
the Employment Agreement for another term.

The Employment  Agreements  provide that the current base  compensation  of each
executive will be adjusted in accordance with MONY Life's regular administrative
practices  generally  applicable to its senior executives.  Under the Employment
Agreements,  each  executive will  participate  in MONY Life's Annual  Incentive
Compensation  Plan (the  "Annual  Incentive  Compensation  Plan") and  Long-Term
Performance   Plan,   will  be  entitled  to  participate  in  other   incentive
compensation  plans  and any  employee  benefit  plans  and  programs  generally
available to senior executives of MONY Life, and will be entitled to perquisites
and fringe benefits generally available to officers of their respective ranks at
MONY Life.

                                       12


The Employment  Agreements prohibit the executives from engaging in or advising,
either directly or indirectly,  any business which is substantially  competitive
with any business then actively  conducted by MONY Life during the term of their
employment and for a six-month period following  termination of employment.  The
executives are also prohibited from  soliciting,  either directly or indirectly,
any person  employed  by MONY Life for one year  following  the  termination  of
employment,  and are prohibited from divulging confidential information relating
to the Company.

The Employment Agreements provide that MONY Life will have the right at any time
to terminate any  executive's  employment,  and that any executive will have the
right  at any time to  terminate  his  employment  with  MONY  Life.  Under  the
Employment  Agreements,  MONY Life will provide an executive  with the following
benefits  in the  event of  termination  by MONY Life  other  than for cause (as
defined in the  Employment  Agreements)  or by the executive for good reason (as
defined in the Employment Agreements): (i) a lump-sum payment in an amount equal
to (a) two times the executive's  annual base compensation in effect on the date
of termination,  in the case of Messrs.  Roth, Foti and Levine, or (b) one times
the executive's  annual base  compensation in effect on the date of termination,
in the case of Mr. Daddario, reduced in all cases by any severance payments made
to the executive under any other  employment  contract or severance  arrangement
with MONY Life;  (ii) any  incentive  compensation  earned  with  respect to the
calendar year  immediately  preceding the termination date but not yet paid, and
incentive   compensation  with  respect  to  the  calendar  year  in  which  the
termination  date  occurs,  in each  case in an amount  determined  by the Chief
Executive Officer (or, in the case of the Chief Executive Officer,  by the Board
of  Directors)  which  will  be  not  less  than  50% of  the  executive's  base
compensation;  (iii) at the discretion of the Chief Executive Officer, the value
of the  perquisites  to which the executive is entitled  immediately  before the
termination date and such other items as the Chief Executive Officer (or, in the
case of the Chief  Executive  Officer,  the Board of Directors)  will determine;
(iv) title to any MONY Life-furnished  automobile; and (v) outplacement services
for up to one year with a nationally recognized  outplacement firm. In addition,
MONY Life will keep in effect, for the life of the executive whose employment is
terminated other than for cause or good reason,  the split-dollar life insurance
policy maintained for the executive immediately prior to termination,  with MONY
Life and the executive retaining their respective obligations to pay premiums in
accordance with the terms of the policy.

MONY  Life has  also  entered  into  change  in  control  employment  agreements
(collectively,  the "Change in Control  Agreements") with each of Messrs.  Roth,
Foti,  Levine,  Daddario and Ugolyn and other executive officers of the Company,
the  provisions  of which  become  effective  if and when  there is a Change  in
Control (as defined  below) of the Company.  The current  terms of the Change in
Control  Agreements  are  effective  through  December  31,  2002,  and  will be
automatically  renewed  for  successive  one-year  terms  unless MONY Life gives
notice of  non-renewal  to the executive not later than the preceding  September
30. If a Change in Control occurs, the expiration date is automatically extended
to the  third  anniversary  of the  Change  in  Control  and  the  agreement  is
thereafter  automatically renewed for successive one-year terms unless MONY Life
gives notice of  non-renewal  to the  executive not later than six months before
the agreement would otherwise expire.

The Change in Control  Agreements  provide that the executives  will continue to
receive base compensation at a rate not less than the rate in effect immediately
prior to the Change in Control,  and that base compensation will be increased in
accordance with the regular administrative practices in effect immediately prior
to the Change in Control.  The  agreements  further  provide that the executives
will be entitled to perquisites  and fringe  benefits equal to those attached to
their positions  immediately prior to the Change in Control, will continue to be
full participants in all incentive  compensation  plans and all employee benefit
plans and  programs for senior  executives  in effect  immediately  prior to the
Change in Control,  and will be entitled to participate  in any other  incentive
compensation plans and employee benefit plans and programs  generally  available
to senior executives of MONY Life.

The Change in Control  Agreements  provide that MONY Life will have the right at
any time to terminate the  executive's  employment,  and that the executive will
have the right at any time to terminate his employment with MONY Life. Under the
Change in Control  Agreements,  MONY Life will  provide the  executive  with the
following benefits in the event of termination by MONY Life other than for Cause
(as defined in the Change in Control  Agreements)  or by the  executive for Good
Reason (as defined in the Change in Control Agreements):  (i) a lump-sum payment
in an amount  equal to three  times the sum of (a) the  executive's  annual base
compensation in effect on the termination date, plus (b) the executive's  annual
bonus in effect on the  Termination  Date,  plus (c) the  executive's  Long-Term
Performance Plan payment,  such sum being reduced by any severance payments made
to the executive under any other  employment  contract or severance  arrangement
with MONY Life;  (ii) any  incentive  compensation  payments  awarded for a year
prior to the year in which the  termination  date  occurs but not paid as of the
termination  date;  (iii) a  specified  PRO RATA  portion of the bonus under the
Annual Incentive  Compensation  Plan that would have been earned for the year in
which  the  termination  date  occurs;  (iv)  all  amounts  payable  as  of  the
termination date in accordance with the terms of the Long-Term  Performance Plan
and an award in respect of any  uncompleted  three-year  cycle  thereunder;  (v)
immediate vesting of and, if applicable,  lapse of restrictions with respect to,
previously  unvested stock option and  restricted  share awards (or, in any case
where such vesting or lapse would be prohibited


                                       13


by certain  provisions  of the New York  Insurance  Law,  cash  payments in lieu
thereof);  (vi) in  addition  to all  other  amounts  otherwise  payable  to the
executive  under the Retirement  Plan and the  Investment  Plan  Supplement,  an
amount equal to the  aggregate  present  value of the  retirement  benefits that
would have been payable to the executive under the Retirement  Plan,  Investment
Plan Supplement and Excess Plan, had his employment not been  terminated;  (vii)
an amount equal to the  aggregate  present  value of the  additional  costs that
would have been incurred by MONY Life for medical and dental  benefits,  retiree
medical  benefits,  and spouse or survivor's  income benefits if the executive's
employment  had not been  terminated;  (viii)  continued  coverage under various
disability and life insurance programs; and (ix) outplacement services for up to
one year with a nationally recognized outplacement firm.

In the event of the death or disability of the executive,  the Change in Control
Agreements provide that the executive (or his  representative)  will be entitled
to receive (i) amounts  owed to the  executive  through  his  effective  date of
termination,  and (ii) a  specified  PRO RATA  portion of all  awards  under the
Long-Term Performance Plan and the Annual Incentive Compensation Plan.

The Change in Control  Agreements  also provide that, to the extent any payments
to the  executives  would be subject to "golden  parachute"  excise  taxes under
Section 4999 of the Code, the  executives  will receive  "gross-up"  payments to
make them  whole  with  respect  to such  taxes  and any  related  interest  and
penalties.

For  purposes  of the Change in Control  Agreements,  a "Change in  Control"  is
defined  generally to include an  acquisition of 20% or more of the voting stock
of the  Company,  a  change  in the  majority  of the  members  of the  Board of
Directors  that is not  supported  by  two-thirds  of the  incumbent  directors,
approval by the shareholders of a merger or  reorganization in which the Company
shareholders do not own at least 80% of the resulting  entity,  a sale of all or
substantially  all of the assets of the Company or MONY Life, a  dissolution  of
the Company or MONY Life, the adoption by the Board of Directors of a resolution
to the effect that any person has acquired  effective  control of the Company or
MONY Life, or the making of any agreement or the  commencement of a tender offer
or proxy contest resulting in any such transaction.


                            COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

CASH COMPENSATION

All Directors of the Company are also directors of MONY Life. For serving on the
Board of  Directors  of MONY Life,  each  director who is not an employee of the
Company ("non-employee director") receives an annual retainer fee of $40,000. No
additional  retainer  fee is paid for service on the Board of  Directors  of the
Company.  In addition,  each such director also receives a meeting fee of $1,500
for  each  meeting  of the  Company's  Board  or  MONY  Life's  Board  attended.
Additionally,  each such director  receives an annual retainer fee of $3,500 per
committee  on which  such  director  serves  as a member  and each  such  member
receives  a meeting  fee of $1,000  for each  committee  meeting  attended.  The
chairperson  of each  committee  receives an additional  annual  retainer fee of
$1,500.  For each joint meeting of the Company's Board and MONY Life's Board (or
committees),  non-employee  directors receive only one meeting fee and also only
one annual Committee or Chairperson retainer fee. The directors may defer all or
part of their compensation as directors until retirement from the Board.

NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTOR RESTRICTED STOCK GRANTS

Pursuant   to  the  Plan  of   Reorganization   of  MONY  Life  (the   "Plan  of
Reorganization"),   the  Board  of  Directors   granted   restricted   stock  to
non-employee  directors of the Company on January 17,  2001.  The purpose of the
grants was to provide stock-based  compensation to non-employee directors of the
Company  in order to  encourage  a high  level of  director  performance  and to
provide  non-employee  directors  with a  proprietary  interest in the Company's
success.

The Board of  Directors  has  discretion  in  determining  the  number of shares
subject to each grant of restricted  stock,  provided that the fair market value
(valued  on the  date of  grant)  of all  shares  granted  to each  non-employee
director  during any calendar year does not exceed the lesser of (i) one-half of
the directors'  fees earned by such  non-employee  director for the  immediately
preceding  calendar year and (ii) $15,000,  rounded  upward to the nearest whole
share.  Grants of restricted stock must be in lieu of cash payment of directors'
fees equal in amount to the fair market value of the  restricted  stock granted.
Each grant of  restricted  stock vests,  based on the  continued  service of the
grantee on the Board of Directors,  in three approximately equal installments on
each of the first three anniversaries on the date of grant thereof. In the event
of the  termination  of the  service on the Board of  Directors  of a grantee by
reason of disability or death, any restricted  stock previously  granted to such
grantee will continue to vest as if the grantee's service had not terminated. In
the event of  termination  of service on the Board of Directors of a grantee for
any reason other than disability or death, any unvested restricted stock will be
forfeited.

Additionally,  the Board of Directors  must obtain the prior approval of the New
York State  Superintendent of Insurance prior to making any additional grants of
restricted  stock to  non-employee  directors until November 16, 2003, the fifth
anniversary of the effective date of the Plan of Reorganization.

                                       14


           HUMAN RESOURCES COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION


THE  FOLLOWING IS THE REPORT OF THE HUMAN  RESOURCES  COMMITTEE OF THE COMPANY'S
BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS   (THE  "HUMAN   RESOURCES   COMMITTEE"),   DESCRIBING  THE
COMPENSATION  POLICIES  AND  RATIONALE  APPLICABLE  TO THE  COMPANY'S  EXECUTIVE
OFFICERS WITH RESPECT TO  COMPENSATION  PAID TO SUCH EXECUTIVE  OFFICERS FOR THE
FISCAL YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2001.  ALL OFFICERS ARE  COMPENSATED AS EMPLOYEES
OF MONY LIFE. THE INFORMATION  CONTAINED IN THE REPORT SHALL NOT BE DEEMED TO BE
"SOLICITING  MATERIAL"  OR  TO BE  "FILED"  WITH  THE  SECURITIES  AND  EXCHANGE
COMMISSION  NOR SHALL SUCH  INFORMATION  BE  INCORPORATED  BY REFERENCE INTO ANY
FUTURE FILING UNDER THE  SECURITIES  ACT OF 1933, AS AMENDED,  OR THE SECURITIES
EXCHANGE  ACT,  AS AMENDED,  EXCEPT TO THE EXTENT THAT THE COMPANY  SPECIFICALLY
INCORPORATES IT BY REFERENCE INTO SUCH FILING.


The Human Resources Committee consists of Messrs.  Durham,  Farley,  Holland and
Johnson,  none of whom is an officer or  employee of the  Company,  MONY Life or
their  affiliates.  The Human  Resources  Committee  is  responsible  for making
determinations with respect to executive  compensation and overall  compensation
policy,  as well as for oversight  and  administration  of the Annual  Incentive
Compensation  Plan,  Long-Term  Performance  Plan and the  Company's  1998 Stock
Incentive Plan (the "Stock Incentive Plan"). This report discusses the executive
compensation  determinations  made by the Human Resources Committee with respect
to the 2001  compensation  of the Company's  executive  officers  (including all
named executive officers) during 2001. The compensation determinations described
below were ratified by the Board of Directors of the Company.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION PHILOSOPHY

In general,  the  executive  compensation  programs  are designed to attract and
retain  executives who will contribute to the Company's  long-term  success,  to
reward  executives  for achieving the Company's  short- and long-term  strategic
goals, to link executive  compensation and shareholder interests through Company
performance- and equity-based plans, and to recognize  individual  contributions
to Company performance.

The Human  Resources  Committee  is assisted  from time to time by  compensation
consulting firms that supply the Human Resources Committee with statistical data
and other  executive  compensation  information  to permit  the Human  Resources
Committee to compare the Company's  compensation  against levels and programs at
other  companies   selected  as  peers  and  at  a  much  broader   spectrum  of
organizations  with which the Company competes for executive  talent. To attract
qualified  executives in certain operational areas, it is sometimes necessary to
compete with banks and other  financial  services  institutions.  The  companies
selected  for  compensation  comparison  purposes are not  necessarily  the same
companies  which  comprise  the  indices  selected  for  the  Performance  Graph
appearing subsequently in this Proxy Statement.

Compensation for the Company's  executive  officers  consists of three principal
elements: base salary, annual incentive and long-term incentive, including stock
incentives. The combination and relative weighting of these elements reflect the
Human Resources Committee's belief that executive compensation should be closely
tied to the Company's profitability.

BASE SALARY

Base salaries of executive  officers are compared against the broad middle range
of the  companies  with which the  Company  competes  for those  positions.  The
Company  reviews annual  salaries  versus the external market on an annual basis
and recommends adjustments accordingly to reflect promotions,  changes in levels
of responsibility and competitive pay levels.

ANNUAL INCENTIVE

Annual incentive  bonuses paid to executive  officers under the Annual Incentive
Compensation Plan have been a significant element of the executive  compensation
program.  If the shareholders  approve The MONY Group Inc. 2002 Annual Incentive
Plan for Senior  Executive  Officers (the "2002 Annual Incentive Plan") attached
to  this  Proxy  Statement,   annual  incentive  compensation  for  participants
thereunder  (including  primarily the most highly paid executive officers of the
Company)  will be  administered  as specified in that plan.  The balance of this
section  describes  the  manner  in which  annual  incentive  compensation  will
continue to be administered for other employees  eligible for such compensation.
The Annual Incentive  Compensation Plan is designed to reward management for the
achievement  of corporate  goals and  individual  performance  in achieving such
goals,  as  well as to  compensate  management  on the  basis  of the  Company's
financial results.  Annual bonuses under the Annual Incentive  Compensation Plan
are  initially  based on actual  performance  measured  against  "key  financial
measures" and  qualitative  goals.  For the 2001 bonus year,  these measures and
goals were (i) revenue  generation,  which includes life annualized premiums and
accumulation  assets raised, (ii) GAAP earnings,  (iii) operating expenses,  and
(iv) the qualitative  goals, which are specific  performance  objectives set for
the Company as a whole. The Human Resources Committee reserves the right to make
adjustments as it deems appropriate in its sole discretion.

Each year, the Human Resources  Committee  assigns a relative weight to the "key
financial  measures" to determine the portion of the annual bonuses  represented
by each measure.  In addition,  "minimum," "target" and "maximum" levels are set
for each of the  financial  measures  and the  qualitative  goals  are  rated as
"outstanding,"  "good" or  "satisfactory."  Bonuses  under the Annual  Incentive
Compensation Plan are reviewed and approved by the Human Resources Committee for
payment during the

                                       15



year  subsequent  to the  year in which  the  bonus is  earned.  Because  of the
Company's  financial  performance in 2001,  the five  executive  officers of the
Company whose  compensation is disclosed in this Proxy Statement did not receive
a bonus for 2001.

RESTRUCTURE BONUS

In  November  2001,  the Human  Resources  Committee  of the Board of  Directors
approved a special  Restructure  Bonus Pool to be funded based on the successful
completion,  by  February  28,  2002,  of plans that are  expected  to result in
certain  pre-established  levels of expense  savings.  In March 2002,  the Human
Resources Committee determined that management had put in place plans that would
result in the achievement of corporate savings targets,  and approved payment of
the  restructure  bonus.  The  five  executive  officers  of the  Company  whose
compensation  is disclosed in this Proxy  Statement  were  ineligible to receive
bonuses under the Restructure Bonus Pool.

LONG-TERM INCENTIVES

LONG-TERM  PERFORMANCE PLAN.  Long-term  incentives for the Company's  executive
officers  have  been  provided  under the  Long-Term  Performance  Plan.  If the
shareholders  approve The MONY Group Inc. 2002  Long-Term  Performance  Plan for
Senior Executive  Officers (the "2002 Long-Term  Performance  Plan") attached to
this  Proxy  Statement,   long-term  incentive   compensation  for  participants
thereunder  (including primarily the five most highly paid executive officers of
the Company) will be administered as specified in that plan. The balance of this
section describes the manner in which long-term compensation will continue to be
administered for other employees eligible for such compensation.

Units  are  awarded  in the  first  quarter  of each  year  for  the  succeeding
three-year  period. The number of units awarded is determined by the executive's
level,  job  scope  and  contribution,  as  well as the  competitiveness  of the
executive's total compensation with regard to the external market.

Under the  Long-Term  Performance  Plan,  the Company  makes  awards of units to
eligible officers of the Company to reward long-term  performance of the Company
on a variety of measures,  including  performance relative to the performance of
its peer companies. The awards are subject to a three-year performance cycle. In
connection with the award of the units, the Company assigns a value to each unit
depending  on  predetermined  performance  goals  for  the  period.  As  soon as
practicable  after the completion of a performance  cycle, the value per unit is
determined  according to the Company's  performance over the recently  completed
three-year  performance cycle. The aggregate value of the share units awarded to
each  executive  with  respect to a  performance  cycle is paid in three  annual
installments.  The  first  of  such  payments  is  made  immediately  after  the
determination of the value of the share units. The second and third installments
are paid, with interest, in the two succeeding years.

For the performance  period commencing on January 1, 1999 and ending on December
31, 2001, the measurement goal established was based on the Company's cumulative
GAAP earnings and a return on equity comparison to comparable companies;  during
that period,  the Company's  performance on these measures exceeded the "target"
level. Accordingly, in March 2002, the Human Resources Committee approved a $115
per unit payout.  The five executive  officers of the Company whose compensation
is disclosed in this Proxy  Statement  received the first  installment  on these
units in March  2002.  In  accordance  with  the  Plan,  the  second  and  third
installments will be paid, with interest, in the two succeeding years.

In March  2001,  the  Human  Resources  Committee  established  goals  under the
Long-Term Performance Plan for the three-year performance period from January 1,
2001 to December 31, 2003, based on cumulative GAAP earnings per share, a return
on equity  comparison  to the industry and  performance  of MONY's  Common Stock
compared  to the S&P 500.  Pursuant  to the terms of the  Long-Term  Performance
Plan,  payments for this performance period may not be made until early 2004 and
then only in the event predetermined goals are satisfied.

STOCK  INCENTIVE  PLAN.  On August 14, 1998,  the  Company's  Board of Directors
adopted the Stock  Incentive Plan. The purpose of the Stock Incentive Plan is to
enable the Company to attract and retain  employees  who will  contribute to the
Company's  long term  success by enabling  such  employees  to acquire an equity
interest in the Company.

The  Stock  Incentive  Plan  provides  for  the  grant  of  options   (including
non-qualified and incentive stock options).  The maximum number of shares of the
Common  Stock that may be issued from  November  16,  1998 to November  15, 2004
under the Stock  Incentive Plan is 5% of the total shares  outstanding as of the
completion of the Company's  initial  public  offering,  subject only to certain
adjustments  approved by the New York  Department of Insurance.  Consistent with
rules promulgated by the New York State Superintendent of Insurance, awards were
granted by the Company  after the first  anniversary  of the  November  16, 1998
effective  date of the Plan of  Reorganization.  No options  were granted to the
executive officers during the last two fiscal years.

If the shareholders approve The MONY Group Inc. 2002 Stock Option Plan attached
to this Proxy Statement, grants to participants thereunder will be administered
as specified in that plan.

RESTRICTED STOCK OWNERSHIP PLAN. On May 16, 2001 the  shareholders  approved the
adoption of the Restricted Stock Ownership Plan. The purposes of the Plan are to
motivate the superior  performance of officers of the Company by encouraging and
providing

                                       16


for the  acquisition of an ownership  interest in the Company and to attract and
retain the  services of officers  upon whose  judgment,  interest and effort the
successful  conduct of the Company's  operations  largely depend. The Restricted
Stock  Ownership  Plan is also  intended  to  further  the  goals  of the  Stock
Ownership  Guidelines  for officers of the Company that have been adopted by the
Board of  Directors.  These  guidelines,  described  below,  further  align  the
interests of officers  with those of the  shareholders  by  promoting  long-term
ownership of the Common Stock by the officers.  The number of  restricted  stock
units granted to the five most highly compensated executive officers during 2001
are shown above in the Long-Term Incentive Plan table. These awards for 2001 are
restricted  on the basis of service  and stock  price  appreciation  performance
criteria for the period  2001-2003.  Pursuant to the terms of the grant,  if the
pre-established performance criteria have not been met at the end of the period,
the shares will be cancelled.

STOCK OWNERSHIP GUIDELINES FOR OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS

On January 17, 2001, at the recommendation of the Human Resources  Committee and
the Company's outside executive compensation consultant,  the Board of Directors
approved and adopted Stock Ownership  Guidelines for Officers and Directors (the
"Guidelines").  The purpose of the  Guidelines is to further align the interests
of the  Company's  officers and  directors  with the  shareholders  by providing
targeted levels of ownership of the Company's common stock for each such officer
and director.  The Guidelines  state that, over a period of six years,  officers
are expected to accumulate Company common stock having a fair market value equal
to the following multiples of their base salaries:

         Chief Executive Officer                     5X Base Salary
         President and Chief Operating Officer       4X Base Salary
         Executive Vice President                    2X Base Salary
         Senior Vice President                       1.5X Base Salary
         Vice President                              1X Base Salary

As of December  31,  2001,  all  officers  have met or exceeded  the  first-year
objectives of the ownership guidelines set forth above.

Further, over the same six-year period, independent directors of the Company are
expected to accumulate a number of shares of Guideline  Stock equal to six times
$15,000  divided by the market  price per share at the time of the  acquisition.
This total shall be held for as long as they  continue to serve on the Company's
Board of Directors.

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION

Mr. Roth became Chief  Executive  Officer in 1993. Mr. Roth's annual base salary
was increased by 5.5% from  $900,000 to $950,000  effective  January  2001.  The
Human Resources  Committee  determined that this increase would bring Mr. Roth's
annual base salary to a level competitive with that of chief executive  officers
at peer companies, as evidenced by data obtained from the Company's compensation
consulting firms.

Based on achievement against "key financial measures" established for the Annual
Incentive Compensation Plan, Mr. Roth did not receive a bonus for 2001. Mr. Roth
was also ineligible for the special Restructure Bonus approved by the Human
Resources Committee for 2001.

In 1999, Mr. Roth was awarded 17,000 units under the Long-Term Performance Plan.
For the performance  period commencing on January 1, 1999 and ending on December
31, 2001, the measurement goal established was based on the Company's cumulative
GAAP earnings and a return on equity comparison to comparable companies;  during
that period,  the Company's  performance on these measures exceeded the "target"
level. Accordingly, in March 2002, the Human Resources Committee approved a $115
per unit payout. Mr. Roth received the first installment on these units in March
2002 in the amount of  $651,667.  In  accordance  with the Plan,  the second and
third installments will be paid, with interest, in the two succeeding years.

In March 2001, the Human Resources Committee awarded Mr. Roth 17,000 units under
the Long-Term  Performance  Plan.  For the  three-year  performance  period from
January 1, 2001 to  December  31,  2003,  the  Committee  established  goals for
cumulative GAAP earnings per share, a return on equity  comparison to comparable
companies and price  performance  of MONY Common Stock  compared to the S&P 500.
Pursuant  to the terms of the  Long-Term  Performance  Plan,  payments  for this
performance  period may not be made until early 2004 and then only to the extent
that the pre-established goals are satisfied.

In May 2001,  the Human  Resources  Committee  awarded Mr. Roth 49,650 shares of
restricted  stock under the  Restricted  Stock  Ownership  Plan.  The restricted
shares vest over a  three-year  period and the  restrictions  on the  restricted
shares   will  lapse  only  if,  at  the  end  of  2003  the   Company  has  met
pre-established objectives relating to stock price appreciation.  Otherwise, the
restricted  shares will be cancelled.  The market value of each of the Company's
common shares on the date of the  restricted  stock grant was $36.23.  The Human
Resources Committee believes that these awards help comprise a total


                                       17


compensation  package  for  Mr.  Roth  that  is  competitive  and  that  puts  a
significant  portion of his  compensation  at risk  depending upon the long term
success of the Company.

POLICY ON DEDUCTIBILITY OF COMPENSATION

Section  162(m) of the Code imposes a  limitation  on the tax  deductibility  of
certain  compensation  that  publicly  held  corporations  pay to their top five
executive  officers  for whom  compensation  is  reported  in the  annual  Proxy
Statement.   There  is  an  exception   to  this   limitation   for   "qualified
performance-based  compensation" meeting certain requirements under the Code and
the applicable regulations.

The Human Resources  Committee generally favors  performance-based  compensation
that ties the financial  interests of the  Company's  executives to those of its
shareholders.  For this reason, the Human Resources Committee and the Board have
approved the  attached  2002  Long-Term  Performance  Plan for Senior  Executive
Officers  and 2002  Annual  Incentive  Plan for Senior  Executive  Officers  and
recommend their approval by the shareholders at the annual meeting.  Those plans
are  designed  to  meet  the  requirements  of  Section  162(m)  for  "qualified
performance-based  compensation,"  as is the Restricted  Stock  Ownership  Plan.
Nevertheless,  in some  circumstances  it may be in the  best  interests  of the
Company  to  pay  compensation  that  is not  fully  deductible  because  of the
limitations under the Code; the Human Resources  Committee reserves the right to
do so if it  believes  that is in the  best  interests  of the  Company  and its
stockholders.


Respectfully submitted,

                             HUMAN RESOURCES COMMITTEE OF
                             THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS


                                        James L. Johnson, Chairman
                                        G. Robert Durham
                                        James B. Farley
                                        Robert Holland, Jr.



















                                       18


PERFORMANCE GRAPH

The graph set forth below shows the  cumulative  total  return to holders of the
Company's Common Stock from November 11, 1998 to December 31, 2001,  computed by
dividing (X) the difference between the price per share at the beginning and end
of such  period by (Y) the share  price at the  beginning  of such  period,  and
compares such return to the  performance at the beginning and end of such period
of the  Standard  &  Poor's  500  Index  and the  Standard  &  Poor's  Insurance
(Life/Health)-500 Index. The graph assumes $100 invested on November 11, 1998 in
the  Company's  Common  Stock (at $23.50 per share),  the  Standard & Poor's 500
Index and the Standard & Poor's  Insurance  (Life/Health)-500  Index. The return
for the  Company's  Common  Stock and both  Standard  & Poor's  indices  assumes
reinvestment of all dividends for the period.

                             CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN

            BASED ON INVESTMENT OF $100 BEGINNING NOVEMBER 11, 1998

     [THE DATA BELOW IS PRESENTED AS A LINE GRAPH IN THE PRINTED DOCUMENT]

                 Mony Group Inc    S&P 500 Index    Insurance (Life/Health)-500

11/11/98             100.0             100.0                100.00
Dec98                133.2             109.9                111.10
Jun99                139.8             123.5                113.20
Dec99                125.9             133.1                 95.56
Jun00                145.9             132.5                 78.30
Dec00                215.6             121.0                108.80
Jun01                175.0             112.9                109.10
Dec01                152.9             106.6                100.30




----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    ANNUAL RETURN PERCENTAGE

                                                        SIX MONTHS ENDING

COMPANY/INDEX                       DEC98        JUN99         DEC99        JUN00        DEC00        JUN01        DEC01
------------                        -----        -----         -----        -----        -----        -----        -----
                                                                                              
MONY GROUP INC                      33.24         4.93         -9.92        15.85        47.76       -18.83       -12.62
S&P 500 INDEX                        9.93        12.38          7.71        -0.42        -8.72        -6.70        -5.56
INSURANCE
  (LIFE/HEALTH)-500                 11.12         1.87        -15.59       -18.12        38.98         0.33        -8.05





----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      INDEXED RETURNS

                                                     SIX MONTHS ENDING*

                               BASE
                              PERIOD
COMPANY/INDEX                11/11/98         DEC98       JUN99      DEC99       JUN00       DEC00      JUN01       DEC01
------------                  ------          -----       -----      -----       -----       -----      -----       -----
                                                                                           
MONY GROUP INC                 100           133.24      139.82     125.95      145.90      215.59     175.00      152.92
S&P 500 INDEX                  100           109.93      123.55     133.07      132.50      120.95     112.85      106.58
INSURANCE
  (LIFE/HEALTH)-500            100           111.12      113.21      95.56       78.25      108.75     109.10      100.33



----------
*    Six-month  returns for the periods  indicated  except December 1998,  which
     reflects  the return  between  November  11, 1998,  the  effective  date of
     demutualization, and December 31, 1998.


                                       19


                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS


Goldman Sach has from time to time performed investment banking services for the
Company.  In January 2002,  the Company  entered into an agreement  with Goldman
Sachs pursuant to which Goldman Sachs has agreed to provide  financial  advisory
services regarding certain financing opportunities.  This agreement contemplates
the payment of various fees to Goldman  Sachs,  including  fees payable upon the
Company's  entering  into a firm  commitment  in respect of such a financing and
upon the  consummation  of such  financing.  To date,  no fees have been paid to
Goldman Sachs for its services provided under this agreement.


Mr. Kanner,  a director,  is a member of the law firm of Dewey  Ballantine  LLP,
which has  provided,  and is expected to continue to provide,  legal  advice and
services to the Company.


     PROPOSAL 2. RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

On February 20, 2002 the Board of Directors,  on the recommendation of the Audit
Committee, appointed PricewaterhouseCoopers independent accountants to audit and
report  on the  consolidated  financial  statements  of the  Company  for  2002.
PricewaterhouseCoopers  has audited and reported on the  consolidated  financial
statements of the Company for 2001.

Although  ratification  of  the  appointment  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  by the
shareholders  is not required,  the Board of Directors has determined that it is
desirable to request  ratification of such  appointment.  If ratification is not
obtained, the Board of Directors will reconsider the appointment.

The Company has been advised that representatives of PricewaterhouseCoopers will
be present at the Annual Meeting.  They will be afforded the opportunity to make
a  statement,  should  they  desire  to do so,  and to  respond  to  appropriate
questions.

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT SHAREHOLDERS VOTE FOR THIS PROPOSAL.

     PROPOSAL 3. APPROVAL OF THE MONY GROUP INC. 2002 ANNUAL  INCENTIVE PLAN FOR
                 SENIOR EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

The Board of Directors  recommends that the shareholders approve the 2002 Annual
Incentive  Plan,  which has been  adopted by the Board  subject  to  shareholder
approval.  The 2002 Annual Incentive Plan will enable the Company to continue to
offer  annual  performance-based  cash  incentives  to  senior  executives  in a
tax-efficient manner.

To date,  the Company has been  permitted to take federal  income tax deductions
for certain performance-based incentive payments to senior executive officers in
the years  immediately  following the initial public  offering  under  incentive
compensation  plans  previously in effect and  disclosed in connection  with the
initial public offering.  Because 2001 was the third calendar year following the
year of the Company's  initial  public  offering,  the  transition  period under
Section 162(m) of the Code and the regulations adopted thereunder expires on May
15,  2002.  For the Company to  continue  to qualify for federal tax  deductions
under Section 162(m),  the pertinent  performance-based  plans must meet certain
requirements. One such requirement is the approval at this year's annual meeting
of  shareholders  of the material  terms of such plans,  including  the eligible
employees,  the maximum amounts  payable and the business  criteria on which the
performance goals under such plans are based.

The 2002  Annual  Incentive  Plan must be  approved by the holders of at least a
majority of the outstanding shares of Common Stock present, or represented,  and
entitled to vote at the annual meeting.  If it is approved by the  shareholders,
the  2002   Annual   Incentive   Plan  will  take   effect   with   respect   to
performance-based  compensation paid thereunder for years commencing on or after
January 1, 2002.  If  shareholder  approval  is not  obtained,  the 2002  Annual
Incentive Plan will not take effect.

The  following is a summary of the material  terms of the 2002 Annual  Incentive
Plan. The full text of the 2002 Annual  Incentive Plan is attached to this Proxy
Statement as Exhibit A.

DESCRIPTION OF THE 2002 ANNUAL INCENTIVE PLAN

PURPOSE OF THE 2002  ANNUAL  INCENTIVE  PLAN.  The  purpose  of the 2002  Annual
Incentive Plan is to provide  incentives to senior executive officers to improve
operating  results of the Company and to reward them, in a tax efficient manner,
for the accomplishment of financial and strategic objectives of the Company.

ADMINISTRATION OF THE 2002 ANNUAL INCENTIVE PLAN. The 2002 Annual Incentive Plan
will be  administered  by the Human  Resources  Committee  of the Board (or such
other  committee of the Board that the Board may designate from time to time) or
any  subcommittee  thereof,  but in any case consisting of two or more directors
each of whom is an "outside  director" within the meaning of Section 162(m) (any
of which is referred to in this Proposal 3 as the "Committee"). The Committee

                                       20


may   delegate   to  any   appropriate   officer  or  employee  of  the  Company
responsibility  for certain  administrative  functions  (but not the exercise of
discretion) under the 2002 Annual Incentive Plan.

The 2002 Annual  Incentive  Plan provides for the payment of annual cash bonuses
to participants in the event of the achievement of  pre-established  performance
objectives  set by the  Committee  in  writing  within  the first 90 days of the
performance  period  (meaning the  calendar  year or such other period as may be
designated  by the  Committee)  or on  such  other  date as may be  required  or
permitted under Section 162(m). Under the 2002 Annual Incentive Plan, as soon as
practical after the end of each performance  period,  the Committee must certify
in  writing  whether  the  pre-established   performance   objectives  for  that
performance period have been achieved.

PERFORMANCE  CRITERIA.  Any such  performance  objectives must be based upon the
relative or comparative  achievement  of one or more of the following  criteria,
for either the Company or any  identified  business  unit,  as determined by the
Committee:  (i) net income, (ii) pretax operating income,  (iii) earnings before
income  taxes,   (iv)  earnings  before   interest,   taxes,   depreciation  and
amortization, (v) earnings per share, (vi) return on shareholders' equity, (vii)
change in identified  expense levels,  (viii)  profitability  of an identifiable
business unit or product, (ix) change in revenues, (x) stock price appreciation,
(xi) total shareholder return, or (xii) any combination of the foregoing; any of
which or combination of which may be used on an absolute basis or relative to an
identified index or peer group as specified by the Committee.

ELIGIBLE  PARTICIPANTS.  The  participants  under the 2002 Annual Incentive Plan
will include all "Covered Employees" as defined in Section 162(m), meaning those
employees  who, on the last day of the  corporation's  taxable year, are (1) the
chief executive  officer (or another  executive  acting in such capacity) or (2)
among the four  highest  compensated  officers  (other than the chief  executive
officer) whose compensation is required to be reported to shareholders under the
Securities  Exchange  Act.  In  addition,  the  Committee  may  designate  as  a
participant  in the 2002  Annual  Incentive  Plan any  executive  officer of the
Company as defined in Rule 3b-7 of the  Exchange  Act,  which  includes  certain
other senior  executives.  In total,  approximately 14 employees are eligible to
become participants under the 2002 Annual Incentive Plan.

MAXIMUM AMOUNT  PAYABLE.  The maximum amount payable to a participant in any one
calendar year is $5,000,000.

NEGATIVE DISCRETION.  The Committee may exercise "negative discretion" to reduce
awards payable to any Covered Employee below the amount otherwise indicated as a
result of the achievement of the performance  objectives  pre-established by the
Committee.

OTHER AWARDS.  In addition,  (1) the Committee may pay to any participant who is
not a  Covered  Employee  a bonus  for a  performance  period in an amount up to
$5,000,000 on the basis of individual  performance  or any other  criterion that
the Committee, in its discretion,  deems to warrant the payment of such a bonus,
and (2) in connection  with the hiring of any person who is or becomes a Covered
Employee,  the  Committee  may provide for a minimum  bonus for that person with
respect  to the  performance  period in which he or she is hired  and/or for the
next  following  performance  period,  regardless  of  whether  the  performance
objectives are attained in that performance period. Further, the Company retains
the ability to pay a non-deductible bonus or other  non-deductible  compensation
to any Covered Employee outside the terms of the 2002 Annual Incentive Plan.

CHANGE IN CONTROL. Upon the occurrence of a Change in Control, the participants'
entitlement  to awards under the 2002 Annual  Incentive Plan shall be treated as
required under the Change in Control  Agreements  referred to under  "Employment
and Change in Control Agreements" on page 12 of this Proxy Statement.

PLAN  BENEFITS.  No awards  have yet been made under the 2002  Annual  Incentive
Plan,  and awards to be made in the future  under  that  plan,  if any,  are not
determinable at this time. Nor, in view of the Company's  financial  performance
in 2001,  would any awards have been made under the 2002 Annual  Incentive  Plan
had that plan been in effect for the last completed fiscal year.

THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE  APPROVAL OF THE MONY
GROUP INC. 2002 ANNUAL INVENTIVE PLAN FOR SENIOR EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.


     PROPOSAL 4. APPROVAL OF THE MONY GROUP INC. 2002 LONG-TERM PERFORMANCE PLAN
                 FOR SENIOR EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

The Board of Directors  recommends that the  shareholders  approve the Company's
2002 Long-Term  Performance Plan, which has been adopted by the Board subject to
shareholder  approval.  The 2002  Long-Term  Performance  Plan will  enable  the
Company to continue to offer long-term cash incentives to senior executives in a
tax-efficient manner.



                                       21


See the  foregoing  discussion  -- under  "Approval of The MONY Group Inc.  2002
Annual  Incentive Plan for Senior  Executive  Officers" -- for an explanation of
why  shareholder   approval  is  required  at  this  year's  annual  meeting  of
shareholders  to permit the Company to continue to qualify under Section  162(m)
of the Code for federal income tax deductions for certain incentive-compensation
payments.  In the case of the 2002 Long-Term Performance Plan, as well, approval
of the material terms is required at this year's annual meeting of  shareholders
to preserve  the federal tax  deduction  for certain  payments  that may be made
thereunder.  Such terms  include the  eligible  employees,  the maximum  amounts
payable and the business criteria on which the performance goals under such plan
are based.

The 2002 Long-Term  Performance Plan must be approved by the holders of at least
a majority of the  outstanding  shares of Common Stock present,  or represented,
and  entitled  to  vote  at  the  annual  meeting.  If it  is  approved  by  the
shareholders,  the 2002 Long-Term Performance Plan will take effect with respect
to  performance-based   compensation  paid  thereunder  for  performance  cycles
commencing on or after January 1, 2002. If shareholder approval is not obtained,
the 2002 Long-Term Performance Plan will not take effect.

The  following  is a  summary  of  the  material  terms  of the  2002  Long-Term
Performance  Plan.  The full  text of the  2002  Long-Term  Performance  Plan is
attached to this Proxy Statement as Exhibit B.

DESCRIPTION OF THE 2002 LONG-TERM PERFORMANCE PLAN

PURPOSE  OF THE  2002  LONG-TERM  PERFORMANCE  PLAN.  The  purpose  of the  2002
Long-Term Performance Plan is to provide incentives to senior executive officers
to improve  long-term  operating  results and to reward them, in a tax-efficient
manner, for the achievement of the Company's  long-term  financial and strategic
objectives.

ADMINISTRATION  OF THE 2002  LONG-TERM  PERFORMANCE  PLAN.  The  2002  Long-Term
Performance  Plan will be administered  by the Human Resources  Committee of the
Board (or such other  committee of the Board that the Board may  designate  from
time to time) or any subcommittee  thereof, but in any case consisting of two or
more  directors  each of whom is an  "outside  director"  within the  meaning of
Section  162(m)  (any of  which is  referred  to here as the  "Committee").  The
Committee  may  delegate to any  appropriate  officer or employee of the Company
responsibility  for certain  administrative  functions  (but not the exercise of
discretion) under the 2002 Long-Term Performance Plan.

Payments under the 2002 Long-Term  Performance Plan depend on the achievement of
pre-established long-term objectives over performance cycles. Performance cycles
are  three-year  periods  (or other  periods  of longer  than one year as may be
designated by the Committee).

Under  the  2002  Long-Term  Performance  Plan,  before  the  90th  day of  each
performance  cycle (or by such other  deadline as may be  required or  permitted
under  Section  162(m) of the  Code),  the  Committee  must  make any  awards of
performance  units for that cycle and  establish in writing a schedule of Earned
Values to be paid per  performance  unit upon the achievement of the performance
objectives for that cycle.

Within 90 days after the  conclusion of each  performance  cycle,  the Committee
must  certify  whether the  performance  criteria  have been  achieved  for that
performance  cycle.  If the  performance  objectives  have been achieved and the
Committee  has so  certified,  cash awards will be made in the amount of the (a)
Earned Value  indicated  according to  performance  against the  pre-established
objectives times (b) the number of performance units awarded to each participant
(up to the maximum amount payable, as set forth below).

PERFORMANCE  CRITERIA.  The  performance  objectives must be based on one or any
combination  of the  following  criteria,  for  the  Company  or any  identified
business  unit,  as  determined by the  Committee:  (i) net income,  (ii) pretax
operating  income,  (iii)  earnings  before income taxes,  (iv) earnings  before
interest,  taxes,  depreciation and  amortization,  (v) earnings per share, (vi)
return on  shareholders'  equity,  (vii) change in  identified  expense  levels,
(viii) profitability of an identifiable business unit or product, (ix) change in
revenues, (x) stock price appreciation,  (xi) total shareholder return, or (xii)
any  combination of the  foregoing;  any of which or combination of which may be
used on an absolute  basis or relative to an  identified  index or peer group as
specified by the Committee.

PAYMENT  OF AWARDS.  Assuming  that  performance  objectives  for the  pertinent
performance  cycle have been  achieved,  cash awards are paid out in three equal
annual  installments over a three-year period.  Within 90 days following the end
of each performance cycle, or as soon as practical thereafter,  each participant
shall be paid the first  installment of his or her earned award.  The second and
third installments will be credited with an interest  equivalent to the interest
rate for the  relevant  year on the Blended GIC Fund under the  Investment  Plan
Supplement or under any successor plan. Interest shall be credited from March 31
of the year in which the first  installment  is payable  through  the end of the
month  before  payment of the second and third  installments  is actually  made,
respectively.



                                       22


ELIGIBLE  PARTICIPANTS.  The participants  under the 2002 Long-Term  Performance
Plan will include all "Covered  Employees"  as defined in Section  162(m) and as
described  under  "Description  of the 2002  Annual  Incentive  Plan -- Eligible
Participants" on page 21 of this Proxy Statement. In addition, the Committee may
designate as a participant in the 2002 Long-Term  Performance Plan any executive
officer  of the  Company  as defined  in Rule 3b-7 of the  Exchange  Act,  which
includes certain other senior executives.  In total,  approximately 14 employees
are eligible to become participants under the 2002 Long-Term Performance Plan.

MAXIMUM AMOUNT  PAYABLE.  The maximum amount payable to a participant  under the
2002 Long-Term Performance Plan in any one year is $7,000,000.

NEGATIVE DISCRETION.  The Committee may exercise "negative discretion" to reduce
awards  payable to any Covered  Employee  below the lesser of (a) the $7,000,000
maximum  amount,  and (b) the  amount  otherwise  indicated  as a result  of the
achievement of the performance objectives pre-established by the Committee.

CHANGE IN CONTROL. Upon the occurrence of a Change in Control, the participants'
entitlement to awards under the 2002 Long-Term Performance Plan shall be treated
as  required  under the Change in Control  Agreements  referred to on page 12 of
this Proxy Statement.

PLAN  BENEFITS.   Certain  executive  officers  have  received  awards  for  the
performance  cycle  commencing  this  calendar  year,  which  awards will become
effective  under the 2002  Long-Term  Performance  Plan if it is approved at the
annual meeting of  shareholders.  If the 2002 Long-Term  Performance Plan is not
approved, such awards will not take effect.

The numbers of such performance units awarded to each such executive officer are
set forth  below.  The dollar  value of such units is not  determinable  at this
time. Assuming that the "Target"-level performance objectives for the applicable
performance  cycle were  achieved,  the  amounts  that would be  received by the
following  participants  under the 2002 Long-Term  Performance  Plan (over three
years  following the completion of the performance  cycle,  with interest -- not
shown here -- for the latter two installments) would be as follows:


               THE MONY GROUP INC. 2002 LONG-TERM PERFORMANCE PLAN




                                                                                     DOLLAR
                                                                                    VALUE AT
     NAME AND POSITION                                                              "TARGET"       NUMBER OF UNITS
     ----------------                                                             -------------    ---------------
                                                                                                 
     Michael I. Roth,
      Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer ..................         $3,000,000          30,000
     Samuel J. Foti,
      President and Chief Operating Officer ..............................         $2,500,000          25,000
     Kenneth M. Levine,
      Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer ..............         $1,000,000          10,000
     Richard Daddario,
      Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer ...............         $1,000,000          10,000
     Victor Ugolyn,
      Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer,
      Enterprise Capital Management, Inc. ................................         $1,000,000          10,000
     Executive Group .....................................................         $8,500,000          85,000
     Non-Executive Director Group ........................................              0                 0
     Non-Executive Officer Employee Group ................................              0                 0



THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE  APPROVAL OF THE MONY
GROUP INC. 2002 LONG-TERM PERFORMANCE PLAN FOR SENIOR EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.

     PROPOSAL NO. 5 APPROVAL OF THE MONY GROUP INC. 2002 STOCK OPTION PLAN

The Board of Directors  recommends that the  shareholders  approve the Company's
2002 Stock Option Plan (the "2002 Stock Option Plan"), which has been adopted by
the Board subject to stockholder approval. The 2002 Stock Option Plan authorizes
the grant of stock options that may be either  "nonqualified  stock options," or
"incentive stock options" under the Code. If approved by the  stockholders,  the
2002 Stock  Option Plan would  permit the grant of options  that are intended to
satisfy the requirements  for  "performance-based  compensation"  that is exempt
from the tax  deduction  limitations  of  Section  162(m) of the Code,  which is
discussed below.


                                       23


The purpose of the 2002 Stock  Option Plan is to advance  the  interests  of the
Company  and its  stockholders  by  attracting,  retaining  and  motivating  key
personnel upon whose judgment,  initiative and effort the successful  conduct of
the Company's operations is largely dependent,  and to encourage and enable such
persons to acquire and retain a  proprietary  interest in the Company.  The 2002
Stock Option Plan is also  intended to further the goals of the Stock  Ownership
Guidelines  for officers and  directors of the Company that have been adopted by
the Board of  Directors.  These  guidelines,  described in this Proxy  Statement
under the  heading  "Compensation  Committee  Report,"  will  further  align the
interests of officers and directors with those of the  shareholders by promoting
the ownership of Common Stock by the officers and directors.

Adoption  and  approval  of a new stock  option plan is  necessary  at this time
because the shares of Common Stock  reserved for  issuance  under the  Company's
Stock  Incentive  Plan are  expected to be depleted in the near term.  The Stock
Incentive  Plan,  adopted  at the time of our  demutualization,  was  limited to
2,361,908 shares under the Plan of Reorganization.

The 2002  Stock  Option  Plan  must be  approved  by the  holders  of at least a
majority of the outstanding shares of Common Stock present, or represented,  and
entitled to vote at the annual  meeting.  The 2002 Stock Option Plan will become
effective  upon the  approval  by the  stockholders  on the  date of the  annual
meeting. In the event that stockholder approval is not obtained,  the 2002 Stock
Option Plan will not become effective.

The  following is a summary of the  principal  features of the 2002 Stock Option
Plan.  The full text of the 2002 Stock  Option  Plan is  attached  to this Proxy
Statement as Exhibit C.

DESCRIPTION OF THE 2002 STOCK OPTION PLAN

ADMINISTRATION OF THE 2002 STOCK OPTION PLAN. The 2002 Stock Option Plan will be
administered  by the Human  Resources  Committee of the Board of  Directors,  or
another  committee of the Board  appointed to  administer  the 2002 Stock Option
Plan (any of which is referred to in this Proposal 5 as the "Committee").  It is
expected that the Committee will be constituted to comply with the "non-employee
director"  requirements  of Rule  16b-3  of the  Exchange  Act and the  "outside
director" requirements of Section 162(m) of the Code.

The  Committee  has the  authority to determine  the persons to whom options are
granted, the time at which options will be granted, the number of shares subject
to an option,  the exercise  price of an option,  the time or times at which the
options  will become  vested and  exercisable,  and the  duration of the option.
Options  generally will be granted for no  consideration  other than services of
the optionee.  The Committee will have the right, from time to time, to delegate
to one or more  officers of the Company the  authority of the Committee to grant
and determine  the terms and  conditions  of option  grants,  subject to certain
limitations.  Option grants to nonemployee members of the Board must be approved
by the full Board.

ELIGIBLE PARTICIPANTS.  All employees,  officers,  directors,  insurance agents,
consultants  and advisors of the Company or any subsidiary  (and any prospective
employee,  officer,  agent, director,  consultant or advisor) are eligible to be
granted  options under the 2002 Stock Option Plan, as selected from time to time
by  the  Committee.  Only  persons  who  are  employees  of the  Company  or any
subsidiary are eligible to be granted an incentive stock option under the Code.

SHARE  LIMITATIONS.  The  maximum  number of shares of Common  Stock that may be
issued  and sold  pursuant  to  options  under  the 2002  Stock  Option  Plan is
5,000,000  shares.  If  an  option  shall  terminate  or  expire  without  being
exercised,  the applicable  number of shares shall again be available  under the
2002 Stock  Option  Plan.  In  addition,  the  number of shares of Common  Stock
exchanged  by an optionee as payment to the  exercise  price or tax  withholding
shall not be deducted from the number of shares available for issuance under the
2002 Stock  Option  Plan.  However,  the  maximum  number of shares  that may be
granted under  incentive  stock options granted under the 2002 Stock Option Plan
shall be  5,000,000  shares.  Shares of Common  Stock to be issued  will be made
available from  authorized  but unissued  shares or shares held in the Company's
treasury.  For  purposes of  compliance  with  Section  162(m) of the Code,  the
maximum  number of shares of Common  Stock that may be subject to stock  options
granted to any one  participant  during any one calendar year shall be 1,000,000
shares.

In the event of certain corporate reorganizations,  recapitalizations,  or other
specified corporate  transactions affecting the Company or the Common Stock, the
2002 Stock Option Plan permits proportionate adjustments to the number and kinds
of shares  available  for  issuance  under the Plan and  subject to  outstanding
options,  as well as the exercise price of  outstanding  options and the maximum
per person limitation.

EXERCISE  PRICE.  The  exercise  price of an option  will be  determined  by the
Committee,  provided that the exercise price per share may not be less than 100%
of the fair market value of a Company share on the date of grant.  The Committee
shall not have the  authority  to reduce the  exercise  price of an  outstanding
option by amendment  or by  cancellation  and  substitution  of options,  unless
otherwise authorized in advance by the Company's shareholders.




                                       24


VESTING AND TERM.  Options  will become  vested in the manner and subject to the
conditions  approved by the  Committee  for  individual  grants and set forth in
stock option  agreements.  The Committee may accelerate the vesting of an option
at any time.  The maximum  term of options  granted  under the 2002 Stock Option
Plan is ten years from the date of grant.

TERMINATION OF SERVICE. Unless otherwise provided by the Committee, in the event
of an  optionee's  death or  disability,  outstanding  stock options will become
fully vested and remain exercisable for a period of one year. In the case of any
other termination of employment or other service,  unless otherwise  provided by
the  Committee,  outstanding  options that have  previously  become  vested will
remain  exercisable  for a  period  of 90 days,  except  for a  termination  for
"cause," in which case all  unexercised  options will be immediately  forfeited.
Options may also be forfeited  if  determined  by the  Committee if the optionee
engages in certain activity detrimental to the Company.

EXERCISE AND TRANSFERABILITY.  A stock option may be exercised by payment of the
exercise price and required  withholding tax. The form of payment may be in cash
or, in  Common  Stock,  through a  broker-assisted  "cashless"  exercise,  or by
another method approved by the Committee. All options are nontransferable except
upon death by the optionee's will or the laws of descent and distribution or, in
the case of nonqualified  stock options,  to family members of the optionee,  as
may be approved by the Committee in accordance  with the terms of the 2002 Stock
Option Plan.

SECTION  7312(W)  LIMITATIONS.  In order to satisfy the  requirements of Section
7312(w) of the New York State  Insurance  Laws,  no stock option  granted to any
officer, director or employee of the Company or any subsidiary may be exercised,
transferred or otherwise disposed of by the optionee prior to December 24, 2003,
which is the fifth  anniversary of the date of distribution of  consideration to
policyholders  under the Plan of Reorganization  relating to the Company. If any
stock option  becomes vested prior to December 24, 2003, the option shall become
exercisable  only upon such date.  If the period of exercise of any vested stock
option would otherwise expire prior to December 24, 2003, the period of exercise
shall continue until the expiration of 30 days following such date.

CHANGE IN CONTROL.  The Committee may, in a stock option agreement,  provide for
one or more of the  following  upon a Change in Control  (as defined in the 2002
Stock Option Plan): (i) the acceleration of vesting or exercisability of a stock
option,  (ii) the extension of the period of exercise of a stock  option,  (iii)
the effects on an option of  termination  of  employment  in  connection  with a
Change in Control,  (iv)  provision for the cash or other  settlement of a stock
option,  (v)  provision  for the  assumption  of the  option or (vi) such  other
modification or adjustment to a stock option as the Committee deems  appropriate
in connection with a Change in Control.

TERM;  AMENDMENT AND  TERMINATION.  The term of the 2002 Stock Option Plan is 10
years. The Board may terminate, or amend the 2002 Stock Option Plan at any time,
subject to  stockholder  approval if the Board deems  necessary  or advisable to
comply with certain tax rules, securities exchange requirements or for any other
reason. Thus, amendments adopted without stockholder approval could increase the
cost of the Plan or benefits to participants.  However, no amendment of the 2002
Stock  Option Plan may be made  without  stockholder  approval  that would allow
options to be granted with an exercise price below fair market value or to allow
the reduction in the exercise price of outstanding options.

PLAN BENEFITS

No grants have yet been made under the 2002 Stock Option Plan by the  Committee,
and the grants to be made in the future  under the 2002 Stock Option Plan by the
Committee are not  determinable at this time.  Stock options granted during 2001
under the Stock Incentive Plan to the Company's named executive officers are set
forth under the heading "Executive  Compensation,"  above. During 2001, no stock
options  were  granted  to the five  executive  officers  of the  Company  whose
compensation  is disclosed in this Proxy  Statement.  Stock  options for 337,093
shares were granted to all other employees and service providers as a group at a
weighted  average exercise price of $35.70 per share.  Currently,  approximately
6,050 persons would be eligible to participate in the 2002 Stock Option Plan, if
designated by the Committee.  The number of persons  eligible to participate and
the number of persons receiving options will vary from year to year.

The closing price of the Company's  Common Stock on the New York Stock  Exchange
on March 18, 2002 was $39.98 per share.

FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

The following is a general  description  of federal income tax  consequences  to
optionees and the Company relating to stock options granted under the 2002 Stock
Option  Plan.  This  discussion  does not purport to cover all tax  consequences
relating  to the  optionees  or the  Company.  An  optionee  will not  generally
recognize  income  upon the grant of a  nonqualified  stock  option to  purchase
shares of Common Stock. Upon exercise of the option, the optionee will generally
recognize  ordinary  compensation  income equal to the excess of the fair market
value for such shares over the  exercise  price.  The tax basis of the shares of
Common Stock in the hands of the optionee will equal the exercise price paid for
the shares plus the amount



                                       25


of ordinary  compensation  income the optionee  recognizes  upon exercise of the
option,  and the holding  period for the shares for capital gains  purposes will
commence on the day the option is  exercised.  An optionee who sells any of such
shares of Common  Stock will  recognize  capital  gain or loss  measured  by the
difference  between  the tax basis of the shares and the amount  realized on the
sale.  The Company  will be entitled to a tax  deduction  equal to the amount of
ordinary  compensation income recognized by the optionee.  The deduction will be
allowed at the same time the optionee recognizes the income.

An optionee will not generally  recognize  income upon the grant of an incentive
stock option to purchase shares of Common Stock and will not generally recognize
income upon exercise of the option,  provided the optionee is an employee of the
Company or a  subsidiary  at all times from the date of grant until three months
prior to  exercise.  However,  the amount by which the fair market  value of the
shares of Common Stock on the date of exercise  exceeds the exercise  price will
be includable for purposes of determining any alternative minimum taxable income
of an optionee.  Where an optionee who has  exercised an incentive  stock option
sells the shares of Common  Stock  acquired  upon  exercise  more than two years
after the grant date and more than one year after exercise, capital gain or loss
will be  recognized  equal to the  difference  between  the sales  price and the
exercise  price.  An optionee  who sells such shares of Common  Stock within two
years  after the grant  date or within one year after  exercise  will  recognize
ordinary  compensation income in an amount equal to the lesser of the difference
between (a) the  exercise  price and the fair market value of such shares on the
date of  exercise,  or (b)  the  exercise  price  and the  sales  proceeds.  Any
remaining  gain or loss will be treated as a capital  gain or loss.  The Company
will be entitled to a tax deduction equal to the amount of ordinary compensation
income  recognized by the optionee in this case. The deduction will be allowable
at the same time the optionee recognizes the income.

Compensation  of persons  who are named  executive  officers  of the  Company is
subject to the tax deduction  limits of Section 162(m) of the Code. Stock option
compensation that qualifies as  "performance-based  compensation" is exempt from
Section  162(m),  thus  allowing  the Company the full tax  deduction  otherwise
permitted for such compensation. If approved by the Company's stockholders,  the
2002 Stock  Option Plan will enable the  Committee  to grant stock  options that
will be exempt from the deduction limits of Section 162(m) of the Code.

THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE  APPROVAL OF THE MONY
GROUP INC. 2002 STOCK OPTION PLAN.



          IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING DELIVERY OF SHAREHOLDER DOCUMENTS

The SEC has approved a new rule  concerning  the  delivery of annual  disclosure
documents. The rule allows the Company to send a single set of its annual report
and proxy statement to any household at which two or more shareholders reside if
the Company believes the shareholders are members of the same family.  This rule
benefits  both the  Company  and its  shareholders.  It  reduces  the  volume of
duplicate information received at a shareholder's  household and helps to reduce
the Company's expenses.  The rule applies to the Company's annual reports, proxy
statements or information statements.  Each shareholder will continue to receive
a separate proxy card or voting instruction card.

If your household  received a single set of disclosure  documents for this year,
but you would  prefer to receive  your own copy,  please  contact the  Company's
transfer agent, EquiServe Trust Company, N.A., by calling their toll free number
(800)  926-6669  and  pressing "0" for a customer  service  representative,  and
inform them of your request.

If you would  like to receive  your own set of annual  disclosure  documents  in
future years, follow the instructions described below.  Similarly,  if you share
an address with  another  shareholder  of the Company and  together  both of you
would like to receive only a single set of annual disclosure  documents,  follow
these instructions:

     o    If your shares are  registered  in your own name,  please  contact the
          Company's  transfer agent,  EquiServe Trust Company,  N.A., by calling
          their toll free number (800)  926-6669 and pressing "0" for a customer
          service  representative,  or by  writing  to them at  EquiServe  Trust
          Company, N.A., P.O. Box 2521, Jersey City, NJ 07310.

     o    If a broker or other nominee holds your shares, please contact ADP and
          inform them of your request by calling them at the number appearing on
          your voting instrument or writing to them at Householding  Department,
          51 Mercedes Way, Edgewood, NY 11717. Be sure to include your name, the
          name of your brokerage firm and your account number.


                                  OTHER MATTERS

The Board of Directors knows of no other matters to be brought before the Annual
Meeting.  If any other  matters  are  presented  for action and come  before the
meeting, it is intended that the persons named as proxies on the proxy card will
vote  on  such  matters  in  accordance  with  their  best  judgment.  A list of
shareholders  entitled to vote at the meeting  will be  available 10 days before
the date of the meeting at the Company's  headquarters  during ordinary business
hours.  You should  contact the  Secretary of The MONY Group Inc. if you wish to
review this list of shareholders.


                                       26



                            EXPENSES OF SOLICITATION

The Company will bear the cost of soliciting  proxies from its  shareholders and
will enlist the help of banks and brokerage  houses in  soliciting  proxies from
their customers. The Company will reimburse these institutions for out-of-pocket
expenses.  In addition to being solicited through the mails, proxies may also be
solicited personally or by telephone by the directors, officers and employees of
the Company or its subsidiaries. The Company has engaged D. F. King to assist in
soliciting   proxies  for  a  fee  of  approximately   $15,000  plus  reasonable
out-of-pocket expenses.


                       2003 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

The 2003 Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  is scheduled to be held on Wednesday,
May 14, 2003. The Board is empowered by the By-Laws of the Company to change the
time of the meeting.

Proposals of shareholders must be received by the Company no later than December
2, 2002 to be eligible for inclusion under the rules of the SEC in the Company's
proxy materials for the 2003 Annual Meeting of Shareholders and must comply with
such rules.

Under the Company's By-Laws, proposals of shareholders not included in the proxy
materials may be presented at the 2003 Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  only if
the  Company's  Secretary has been notified of the nature of the proposal and is
provided  certain  additional  information at least sixty days but not more than
ninety days prior to April 1, 2003, the first anniversary of the Proxy Statement
in connection with the 2002 Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  (subject to certain
exceptions  if the 2002 Annual  Meeting is advanced by more than 30 days and the
proposal is a proper one for shareholder action).

Shareholders  wishing to suggest  candidates  to the Company's  Human  Resources
Committee for  consideration as possible  nominees as directors may submit names
and biographical data to the Secretary of the Company.

The  Company's  By-Laws also require that notice of  nominations  of persons for
election to the Board of Directors, other than those made by or at the direction
of the Board of Directors, must be received by the Secretary at least sixty days
but not more than ninety days prior to April 1, 2003,  the first  anniversary of
the Proxy  Statement in connection  with the 2002 Annual Meeting of Shareholders
(subject to exceptions if the 2002 Annual Meeting of Shareholders is advanced by
more than 30 days). The notice must present certain  information  concerning the
nominees and the shareholders making the nominations. The Secretary must receive
a statement of any nominee's consent to serve as a Director if elected.

                                        By Order of the Board of Directors


                                        /s/ Lee M. Smith
                                        ----------------
                                        Lee M. Smith
                                        VICE PRESIDENT AND CORPORATE SECRETARY

April 1, 2002
                                       27



                                    EXHIBIT A
                               THE MONY GROUP INC.
            2002 ANNUAL INCENTIVE PLAN FOR SENIOR EXECUTIVE OFFICERS


SECTION 1.  PURPOSE.

The  purpose  of this Plan is to provide  incentives  to  Covered  Employees  to
improve  operating results of the Company and to reward them, in a tax efficient
manner,  for the  accomplishment  of financial and  strategic  objectives of the
Company.


SECTION 2.  DEFINITIONS.

Unless the context requires otherwise,  the following  capitalized words as used
herein shall have the following meanings.

(a)  "Board" means the Board of Directors of the Company.

(b)  "Change in Control"  shall have the meaning  given in the Change in Control
     Agreements  referred to on page 12 of the Company's Proxy Statement for the
     May 15, 2002 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

(c)  "Committee" means the Human Resources Committee of the Board (or such other
     committee of the Board that the Board shall designate from time to time) or
     any subcommittee  thereof  consisting of two or more directors each of whom
     is an  "outside  director"  within  the  meaning  of  Section  162(m) and a
     "disinterested   person"  within  the  meaning  of  Rule  16b-3  under  the
     Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as  amended.  The full Human  Resources
     Committee of the Board may serve as the Committee for purposes of this Plan
     if any member who does not qualify as an "outside  director"  under Section
     162(m)  and  a  "disinterested  person"  under  Rule  16b-3  abstains  from
     participation  in  decisions  relating  to this  Plan,  provided  that  the
     Committee  must  include at least two  directors  who  qualify as  "outside
     directors"  and   "disinterested   persons"  within  the  meaning  of  such
     provisions.

(d)  "Common Stock" means the common stock of the Company.

(e)  The  "Company"  means The MONY  Group  Inc.  and  includes  its  direct and
     indirect wholly owned subsidiaries.

(f)  "Covered Employee" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 162(m).

(g)  "Deferral  Period"  means the period of time  during  which  payment of any
     amount otherwise payable under the Plan is deferred at the direction of the
     Committee pursuant to Section 6(b) subject to the right of the Committee to
     terminate the Deferral Period as provided in Section 6(f).

(h)  "Disability"  means the  permanent  and total  disability  of a Participant
     within the meaning of Section  22(e)(3)  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code of
     1986,  as amended  (or any  successor  provision)  or as defined  under the
     provisions  of the  Security  Plan for  Employees  of MONY  Life  Insurance
     Company.

(i)  "Fair Market  Value"  means on any date,  with respect to a share of Common
     Stock,  the  closing  price of a share of Common  Stock as  reported by the
     Consolidated  Tape of New York Stock  Exchange  Listed Shares on such date,
     or, if no shares  were traded on such  Exchange  on such date,  on the next
     date on which the Common Stock is traded.

(j)  "Participant" means (i) each Covered Employee and (ii) each other executive
     officer of the Company as defined in Rule 3b-7 of the  Securities  Exchange
     Act of 1934 whom the Company designates as a participant under the Plan.

(k)  "Performance Period" means the calendar year or such other period as may be
     designated by the Committee.

(l)  "Plan" means this 2002 Annual Incentive Plan for Senior Executive Officers,
     as it may be amended from time to time.

(m)  "Retirement" means the retirement of a Participant from active service with
     the Company on or after the "Early Retirement Date" as such term is defined
     in the Retirement Income Security Plan for Employees of MONY Life Insurance
     Company, or any successor plan, as it may be amended from time to time.

(n)  "Section 162(m)" means Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
     as amended, and any regulations promulgated thereunder.

(o)  "Share" means a share of Common Stock.

(p)  "Subsidiary"  means any entity of which the Company  possesses  directly or
     indirectly  fifty percent or more of the total combined voting power of all
     classes of stock of such entity.



                                      A-1


SECTION 3.  ADMINISTRATION.

(a)  Generally.  The Plan shall be administered by the Committee.  The Committee
     shall have the  responsibility  of construing  and  interpreting  the Plan,
     provided that, in no event,  shall the Plan be interpreted in a manner that
     would  cause  any  award  to a  Covered  Employee  to  fail to  qualify  as
     performance-based  compensation  under Section  162(m),  provided  further,
     however, that neither the foregoing proviso nor any other provision of this
     Plan shall  preclude  or  restrict in any way the ability of the Company or
     the  Committee  to  pay a  non-deductible  bonus  or  other  non-deductible
     compensation  to any Covered  Employee  outside the terms of this Plan. The
     Committee shall  establish the  performance  objectives for any Performance
     Period in accordance  with Section 5 and, as promptly as practicable  after
     the end of each Performance Period,  shall certify whether such performance
     objectives have been obtained.

(b)  Committee's  Determination  Final.  Any  determination  made or decision or
     action  taken  or to be  taken  by  the  Committee,  arising  out  of or in
     connection with the construction, administration, interpretation and effect
     of the Plan and of its rules and regulations,  shall, to the fullest extent
     permitted by law (but subject to the  limitations  on the discretion of the
     Committee    applicable   to   awards   intended   to   be   qualified   as
     performance-based   compensation  under  Section  162(m)),  be  within  the
     Committee's  absolute discretion and shall be conclusive and binding on any
     and  all  Participants  and on any  person  claiming  under  or  through  a
     Participant.

(c)  Employment of Counsel, Consultants or Agents. The Committee may employ such
     legal counsel,  consultants and agents (including counsel or agents who are
     employees of the Company) as it may deem  desirable for the  administration
     of the Plan and may rely upon any opinion  received  from any such counsel,
     consultant or agent and any  computation  received from such  consultant or
     agent.

(d)  Delegation of Administrative  Authority.  The Committee may delegate to any
     appropriate  officer or  employee  of the  Company  responsibility  for the
     administration (but not the exercise of discretion) under this Plan.

(e)  Expenses of Administration.  All expenses incurred in the administration of
     the Plan including,  without limitation, for the engagement of any counsel,
     consultant  or  agent,  shall be paid by the  Company.  No member or former
     member of the Board or the Committee shall be liable for any act, omission,
     interpretation,  construction or determination  made in connection with the
     Plan other than as a result of such individual's willful misconduct.


SECTION 4.  DETERMINATION OF PARTICIPANTS.

In  addition  to  the  Covered  Employees,  the  Committee  may  designate  as a
Participant in the Plan any executive  officer of the Company as defined in Rule
3b-7 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.


SECTION 5.  BONUSES.

(a)  Performance  Criteria.  On or  before  the end of the first 90 days of each
     Performance  Period  (or such other date as may be  required  or  permitted
     under Section  162(m)),  the  Committee  shall  establish  the  performance
     objective or  objectives  that must be satisfied in order for a Participant
     to  receive  a bonus  for such  Performance  Period.  Any such  performance
     objectives  will be based upon one or more of the following  criteria,  for
     the  Company  or  any  identified  business  unit,  as  determined  by  the
     Committee:

                (i)     net income,
                (ii)    pretax operating income,
                (iii)   earnings before income taxes,
                (iv)    earnings  before  interest,   taxes,   depreciation  and
                        amortization,
                (v)     earnings per share,
                (vi)    return on shareholders' equity,
                (vii)   change in identified expense levels,
                (viii)  profitability  of  an  identifiable   business  unit  or
                        product,
                (ix)    change in revenues,
                (x)     stock price appreciation,
                (xi)    total shareholder return,
                (xii)   any combination of the foregoing;


     any of which or  combination  of which may be used on an absolute  basis or
     relative  to an  identified  index  or  peer  group  as  specified  by  the
     Committee.


                                      A-2


(b)  Maximum  Amount  Payable.  If the  Committee  certifies in writing that the
     performance  objectives  established  for the relevant  Performance  Period
     under Section 5(a) have been satisfied, each Participant who is employed by
     the Company on the last day of the  Performance  Period for which the bonus
     is payable  shall be entitled to receive a bonus in an amount not to exceed
     $5,000,000.

(c)  Negative  Discretion.  Notwithstanding  anything else  contained in Section
     5(b)  to  the  contrary,  the  Committee  shall  have  the  right,  in  its
     discretion,  (i) to reduce or eliminate the amount otherwise payable to any
     Participant  under  Sections  5(a) and 5(b) and (ii) to establish  rules or
     procedures  that have the effect of  limiting  the  amount  payable to each
     Participant  to an amount  that is less than the maximum  amount  otherwise
     authorized under Sections 5(a) and 5(b).

(d)  Affirmative Discretion.  Notwithstanding any other provision in the Plan to
     the contrary, (i) the Committee shall have the right, in its discretion, to
     pay to  any  Participant  who  is not a  Covered  Employee  a  bonus  for a
     Performance  Period in an amount up to the  maximum  amount  payable  under
     Section 5(b), on the basis of individual  performance or any other criteria
     that the Committee, in its discretion, deems to warrant the payment of such
     a bonus,  and (ii) in  connection  with the  hiring of any person who is or
     becomes a Covered  Employee,  the Committee may provide for a minimum bonus
     amount for such Covered Employee with respect to the Performance  Period in
     which  such  Covered  Employee  is  hired  and/or  for the  next  following
     Performance  Period,  which  would  be  payable  to such  Covered  Employee
     regardless of whether the relevant performance objectives are attained with
     respect to the relevant Performance Period.

SECTION 6.  PAYMENT OF AWARDS.

(a)  General Rule. Except as otherwise expressly provided hereunder,  payment of
     any  bonus  amount  determined  under  Section  5  shall  be  made  to each
     Participant as soon as practicable  after the Committee  certifies that the
     applicable  performance  objectives  have been attained (or, in the case of
     any bonus payable under the provisions of Section 5(d), after the Committee
     determines  the amount of any such bonus),  provided  that the  Participant
     shall have been employed by the Company  throughout,  including on the last
     day of, the Performance Period. Any such payments shall be made in cash or,
     at the  discretion  of the  Committee,  in awards under The MONY Group Inc.
     Restricted  Stock  Ownership  Plan or in stock options (if such options are
     available under any properly  approved and adopted plan in conformance with
     applicable   state  insurance  laws  and  all  other  applicable  laws  and
     regulations)

(b)  Mandatory Deferral. Notwithstanding Section 6(a), the Committee may specify
     that a percentage of the bonus payable with respect to any Participant, all
     Participants  or any class of Participants  for any  Performance  Period be
     mandatorily deferred for a Deferral Period specified by the Committee.  The
     percentage  to be so deferred  shall be  determined by the Committee in its
     discretion.  Unless  otherwise  determined by the Committee at or after the
     date  of  such  deferral,  any  amount  payable  in  respect  of an  amount
     mandatorily  deferred  pursuant to this  Section 6(b) shall be forfeited by
     the Participant if

     (i)  the Participant's  employment with the Company is terminated for cause
          (as determined in the discretion of the Committee  under the generally
          applicable practices and policies of the Company);

     (ii) the  Participant  voluntarily  terminates  employment,  other  than by
          reason of death,  Disability  or  Retirement,  prior to the end of the
          Deferral  Period  specified  by the  Committee  with  respect  to such
          mandatorily deferred amount; or

     (iii)the  Participant  engages in any  activity  or conduct  which,  in the
          reasonable opinion of the Committee,  is inimical to the best interest
          of the Company.

(c)  Voluntary Deferral.  Notwithstanding Section 6(a), the Committee may permit
     a  Participant  to defer  payment  of any  portion  of an award that is not
     mandatorily  deferred  pursuant to Section  6(b) or to defer  payment of an
     amount mandatorily deferred to a date or event later than that specified by
     the Committee.  Any such election shall be made at such time or times,  and
     subject to such terms and conditions, as the Committee shall determine.

(d)  Accounting for Deferrals. Any amount deferred under this Section 6 shall be
     credited  to one or  more  bookkeeping  accounts  for the  benefit  of such
     Participant on the books and records of the Company.  Such amounts shall be
     deemed  held in cash and shall be  credited  with such rate of  interest or
     such deemed rate of earnings as the  Committee  shall  specify from time to
     time.

(e)  Payment of Deferred  Amounts.  Amounts  attributable to any amount deferred
     under the Plan,  regardless of whether deferred pursuant to Section 6(b) or
     6(c),  shall  be  paid or  commence  to be  paid,  at the  election  of the
     Participant,  at the end of the  applicable  Deferral  Period  or as of the
     first  business  day of the  calendar  year next  following  the end of the
     Deferral   Period.   Payment  of  such  amounts   shall  be  made,  at  the
     Participant's  election, in a lump sum or in five, ten or such other number
     of  annual  installments  as  shall be  permitted  by the  Committee.  If a
     Participant does not timely elect


                                      A-3


     the time at which or the form in which  such  amounts  shall be paid,  such
     amounts shall be paid immediately  following the end of the Deferral Period
     and in a lump sum,  unless the Committee  shall specify a different time or
     method of payment.  The Committee  may, in its  discretion,  accelerate the
     payment of all or any  portion  of any  Participant's  deferred  amounts in
     order to  alleviate a  financial  hardship,  as defined by IRS  Regulations
     under  Section 457,  incurred by the  Participant  due to an  unforeseeable
     emergency beyond the Participant's control.

(f)  Termination of Deferral Period.  Notwithstanding anything else contained in
     the Plan to the contrary,  the Committee may, in its discretion,  terminate
     any  Deferral  Period  in  respect  of  any   Participant.   Such  elective
     termination  will  be  deemed  to be the  end of the  Deferral  Period  for
     purposes of determining  when payment of the  Participant's  interest is to
     commence under Section 6(e).

(g)  Change in Control.  Upon the  occurrence  of a Change in  Control,  (i) the
     Participants'  entitlement  to awards  under  this Plan shall be treated as
     required under the Change in Control  Agreements  referred to on page 12 of
     the  Company's  Proxy  Statement  for the May 15,  2002  Annual  Meeting of
     Shareholders,  and (ii) all amounts  otherwise  mandatorily  deferred under
     subparagraph (b), above, shall become immediately due and shall promptly be
     paid to the Participant.

(h)  Retirement,  Death or  Disability.  In the event that a  Participant  dies,
     takes  Retirement or becomes  subject to  Disability  after the first three
     months of a  Performance  Period and the Committee  subsequently  certifies
     that the  performance  objectives  for that  Performance  Period  have been
     obtained,  the Participant,  or the Participant's  beneficiary (as the case
     may be),  shall be paid a pro rata bonus  equal to (A) the bonus  otherwise
     payable for the  Performance  Period on the basis of the objective  formula
     established by the Committee  times (B) a fraction,  the numerator of which
     is the number of days in the  Performance  Period up to and  including  the
     date of the  Participant's  death or first day of Retirement of Disability,
     and the  denominator  of which  is the  number  of days in the  Performance
     Period (normally,  365). Alternatively,  in the case of death or Disability
     (but not  Retirement),  the  Committee  shall have the  discretion to pay a
     bonus under this Plan to the Participant or the  Participant's  beneficiary
     at the time of such death or Disability.


SECTION 7.  AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION.

Notwithstanding  Section 8(a), the Board or the Committee may at any time amend,
suspend,  discontinue  or terminate the Plan;  provided,  however,  that no such
action shall be effective without approval by the shareholders of the Company to
the extent  necessary  to continue  to qualify  the  amounts  payable to Covered
Employees   as    performance-based    compensation    under   Section   162(m).
Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  no amendment,  suspension,  discontinuance  or
termination of the Plan shall adversely  affect the rights of any Participant or
beneficiary  in respect of any award that the  Committee  has  determined  to be
payable  to a  Participant  in  accordance  with the  terms  hereof or as to any
amounts  awarded,  but payment of which has been  deferred,  in accordance  with
Section 6.


SECTION 8.  GENERAL PROVISIONS.

(a)  Effectiveness  of the  Plan.  Subject  to  the  approval  of the  Company's
     shareholders,  the Plan shall be effective  with respect to calendar  years
     beginning on or after January 1, 2002.

(b)  Designation of Beneficiary. Each Participant may designate a beneficiary or
     beneficiaries  (which  beneficiary  may be an entity  other  than a natural
     person)  to  receive  any  payments   which  may  be  made   following  the
     Participant's  death.  Such  designation  may be changed or canceled at any
     time  without the consent of any such  beneficiary.  Any such  designation,
     change or cancellation must be made in a form approved by the Committee and
     shall not be effective  until received by the Committee.  If no beneficiary
     has been named, or the designated  beneficiary or beneficiaries  shall have
     predeceased the  Participant,  the beneficiary  shall be the  Participant's
     spouse or, if no spouse survives the Participant, the Participant's estate.
     If a Participant  designates more than one beneficiary,  the rights of such
     beneficiaries shall be payable in equal shares,  unless the Participant has
     designated otherwise.

(c)  No Right of  Continued  Employment.  Nothing  contained  in this Plan shall
     create any rights of employment in any Participant or in any way affect the
     right and power of the Company to discharge  any  Participant  or otherwise
     terminate the  Participant's  employment at any time or to change the terms
     of employment in any way.

(d)  No Limitation on Corporate Actions.  Nothing contained in the Plan shall be
     construed  to  prevent  the  Company  from  taking  any  corporate   action
     (including,  without limitation,  making provision for the payment of other
     incentive  compensation,  whether  payable  in cash or  otherwise,  whether
     pursuant to a plan or  otherwise,  and whether such payment  would  qualify
     under Section 162(m) or not), which is deemed by it to be appropriate or in
     its best interest,  whether or not such action would have an adverse effect
     on any awards made under the Plan. No employee, beneficiary or other person
     shall have any claim against the Company as a result of any such action.


                                      A-4


(e)  No Right to Specific  Assets.  Nothing  contained  in the Plan  (including,
     without limitation,  the provisions of Section 6 hereof) shall be construed
     to create in any Participant or beneficiary any claim against,  right to or
     lien on any  particular  assets of the Company or to require the Company to
     segregate or otherwise  set aside any assets or create any fund to meet any
     of its obligations hereunder.

(f)  No Contractual  Right to Bonus.  Nothing in this Plan shall be construed to
     give any  Participant  any right,  whether  contractual  or  otherwise,  to
     receive any bonus with respect to any  Performance  Period unless and until
     the Committee  shall have expressly  determined  that such a Participant is
     entitled to receive such an award pursuant to the terms of the Plan.

(g)  Nonalienation  of  Benefits.   Except  as  expressly  provided  herein,  no
     Participant  or  beneficiary  shall  have the  power or right to  transfer,
     anticipate,  or otherwise  encumber the  Participant's  interest  under the
     Plan.

(h)  Withholding.  Any amount  payable to a Participant  or a beneficiary  under
     this Plan  shall be  subject  to any  applicable  federal,  state and local
     income  and  employment  taxes and any other  amounts  that the  Company is
     required at law to deduct and withhold from such payment.

(i)  Governing Law. The Plan shall be construed in accordance  with and governed
     by the laws of Delaware, without reference to the principles of conflict of
     laws.

(j)  Conflict  with  Contracts.  This Plan is  intended  to be  consistent  with
     existing  Employment  Agreements and Change in Control  Agreements.  In the
     event of any conflict between any provision of this Plan and any Employment
     Agreement or Change in Control  Agreement to which a  Participant  may be a
     party, the terms of such Agreement shall control.

















                                      A-5



                                    EXHIBIT B
                               THE MONY GROUP INC.
          2002 LONG-TERM PERFORMANCE PLAN FOR SENIOR EXECUTIVE OFFICERS


SECTION 1.  PURPOSE OF THE PLAN.

The purpose of this Plan is to provide  incentives to senior executive  officers
to improve  long-term  operating  results and to reward them, in a tax-efficient
manner, for the achievement of the Company's  long-term  financial and strategic
objectives.


SECTION 2.  DEFINITIONS.

The  following  capitalized  words  as used  herein  shall  have  the  following
meanings:

(a)  "Board" means the Board of Directors of the Company.

(b)  "Committee" means the Human Resources Committee of the Board (or such other
     committee of the Board that the Board shall designate from time to time) or
     any subcommittee  thereof  consisting of two or more directors each of whom
     is an "outside  director"  within the meaning of Section  162(m).  The full
     Human  Resources  Committee  of the Board may  serve as the  Committee  for
     purposes  of this Plan if any  member who does not  qualify as an  "outside
     director"  under  Section  162(m) and a  "disinterested  person" under Rule
     16b-3  abstains  from  participation  in  decisions  relating to this Plan,
     PROVIDED THAT the Committee must include at least two directors who qualify
     as "outside  directors" and  "disinterested  persons" within the meaning of
     such provisions.

(c)  The  "Company"  means The MONY  Group  Inc.  and  includes  its  direct and
     indirect wholly owned subsidiaries.

(d)  "Covered Employee" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 162(m).

(e)  "Deferral  Period"  means the period of time  during  which  payment of any
     amount  otherwise  payable  under the Plan is deferred  pursuant to Section
     5(b).

(f)  "Disability"  means the  permanent  and total  disability  of a Participant
     within the meaning of Section  22(e)(3)  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code of
     1986, as amended (or any successor provision).

(g)  "Earned Awards" shall have the meaning given in Section 4(d), below.

(h)  "Participant" means (i) each Covered Employee and (ii) each other executive
     officer of the Company as defined in Rule 3b-7 of the  Securities  Exchange
     Act of 1934 whom the Company designates as a participant under the Plan.

(i)  "Performance  Cycle" means each three-year  period (or such other period of
     longer than one year as may be designated by the  Committee)  for which the
     Committee sets performance criteria to be used in determining the value, if
     any,  to be paid  out for  each  unit  awarded  to  Participants  for  such
     Performance Cycle.

(j)  "Performance Units" means units awarded under Section 4(a) of this Plan.

(k)  "Plan" means this Long-Term  Performance Plan for Senior Executives,  as it
     may be amended from time to time.

(l)  "Retirement" means the retirement of a Participant from active service with
     the Company on or after the "Early Retirement Date" as such term is defined
     in the Company's  Retirement  Income  Security Plan for  Employees,  or any
     successor plan, as it may be amended from time to time.

(m)  "Section  162(m)"  means  Section 162 (m) of the  Internal  Revenue Code of
     1986, as amended, and any regulations promulgated thereunder.

SECTION 3.  ADMINISTRATION OF THE PLAN.

(a)  Generally.  The Plan shall be administered by the Committee.  The Committee
     shall have the  responsibility  of construing  and  interpreting  the Plan,
     PROVIDED THAT, in no event,  shall the Plan be interpreted in a manner that
     would  cause  any  award  to a  Covered  Employee  to  fail to  qualify  as
     performance-based  compensation  under Section  162(m),  PROVIDED  FURTHER,
     HOWEVER, that neither the foregoing proviso nor any other provision of this
     Plan shall  preclude  or  restrict in any way the ability of the Company or
     the  Committee  to  pay a  non-deductible  bonus  or  other  non-deductible
     compensation to any Covered Employee outside the terms of this Plan.

(b)  Committee's  Determination  Final.  Any  determination  made or decision or
     action  taken  or to be  taken  by  the  Committee,  arising  out  of or in
     connection with the construction, administration, interpretation and effect
     of the Plan and of its rules



                                      B-1



     and regulations, shall, to the fullest extent permitted by law (but subject
     to the limitations on the discretion of the Committee  applicable to awards
     intended to be qualified as  performance-based  compensation  under Section
     162(m)),  be  within  the  Committee's  absolute  discretion  and  shall be
     conclusive  and  binding  on any and  all  Participants  and on any  person
     claiming under or through a Participant.

(c)  Employment of Consultants, Counsel or Agents. The Committee may employ such
     legal counsel,  consultants and agents (including counsel or agents who are
     employees of the Company) as it may deem  desirable for the  administration
     of the Plan and may rely upon any opinion  received  from any such counsel,
     consultant or agent and any  computation  received from such  consultant or
     agent.

(d)  Delegation of Administrative  Authority. The Committee may delegate, to any
     appropriate  officer or employee  of the  Company,  responsibility  for the
     administration (but not the exercise of discretion) under this Plan.

(e)  Expenses of Administration.  All expenses incurred in the administration of
     the Plan including,  without limitation, for the engagement of any counsel,
     consultant or agent, shall be paid by the Company.

(f)  Determination of Participants.  In addition to the Covered  Employees,  for
     any  Performance  Cycle the Committee may designate as a Participant in the
     Plan any  executive  officer of the  Company as defined in Rule 3b-7 of the
     Securities Exchange Act of 1934.


SECTION 4.  AWARDS.

(a)  Award of Units and  Establishment  of Unit  Values.  Before the 90th day of
     each  Performance  Cycle (or by such other  deadline as may be required for
     purposes of satisfying  the  requirements  for the deduction for "qualified
     performance-based  compensation" under Section 162(m)), the Committee shall
     make any awards of Performance  Units for that Cycle and shall  establish a
     schedule of the values  ("Earned  Values") to be paid on completion of such
     Performance Cycle depending on the achievement of the performance  criteria
     set forth in such schedule.

(b)  Performance  Criteria.   The  performance  criteria  will  be  one  or  any
     combination  of the following,  for the Company or any identified  business
     unit, as determined by the Committee:

                (i)     net income,
                (ii)    pretax operating income,
                (iii)   earnings before income taxes,
                (iv)    earnings  before  interest,   taxes,   depreciation  and
                        amortization,
                (v)     earnings per share,
                (vi)    return on shareholders' equity,
                (vii)   change in identified expense levels,
                (viii)  profitability  of  an  identifiable   business  unit  or
                        product,
                (ix)    change in revenues,
                (x)     stock price appreciation,
                (xi)    total shareholder return,
                (xii)   any combination of the foregoing;

     any of which or  combination  of which may be used on an absolute  basis or
     relative  to an  identified  index  or  peer  group  as  specified  by  the
     Committee.

(c)  Certification.  Within 90 days  after the  conclusion  of each  Performance
     Cycle,  the Committee shall certify  whether the performance  criteria have
     been achieved for that Cycle.

(d)  Earned Awards.  Earned Awards will equal the product of the total number of
     Performance  Units  awarded to each  Participant  times the Earned Value of
     each such Performance Unit, provided, however, that

     (i)  in no event shall the award paid to a  Participant  in any year exceed
          the maximum  amount  payable  specified in the following  subparagraph
          (e), below, and

     (ii) the  Committee  may  adjust  such  Earned  Awards by the  exercise  of
          negative discretion, as specified in subparagraph (f), below.

(e)  Maximum  Amount  Payable.  If the  Committee  certifies in writing that the
     performance  criteria  established for the relevant Performance Cycle under
     Sections  4(a)  and 4(b)  have  been  satisfied,  each  Participant  who is
     employed by the Company on the last day of the  Performance  Cycle shall be
     entitled  to receive  an Earned  Award in the  amount  indicated  under the
     schedule of Earned Values, but not to exceed $7,000,000.




                                      B-2


(f)  Negative  Discretion.  Notwithstanding  anything else contained in Sections
     4(d) or 4(e) to the contrary,  the Committee  shall have the right,  in its
     discretion,  (i) to reduce or eliminate the amount otherwise payable to any
     Participant  under  Sections  4(d) and 4(e) and (ii) to establish  rules or
     procedures  that have the effect of  limiting  the  amount  payable to each
     Participant  to an amount  that is less than the maximum  amount  otherwise
     authorized under Sections 4(d) and 4(e), above.


SECTION 5.  PAYMENT OF AWARDS; EXPIRATION OF PERFORMANCE UNITS.

(a)  Normal Vesting and Payment.  A Participant's  interest in Performance Units
     and right to receive all  installments  for any Performance  Cycle shall be
     fully vested as of the last day of the relevant Performance Cycle, provided
     that the  Participant is employed by the Company on that date.  Each Earned
     Award shall be payable in three equal annual installments over a three-year
     period.  Subject to Section 5(b),  within 90 days following the end of each
     Performance  Cycle, or as soon as practical  thereafter,  each  Participant
     shall be paid the first  installment of his or her Earned Award. The second
     and third  installments  will be credited with  interest  equivalent to the
     interest  rate for the  relevant  year on the  Blended  GIC Fund  under the
     Investment  Plan  Supplement for Employees and Field  Underwriters  of MONY
     Life  Insurance  Company or under any  successor  plan.  Interest  shall be
     credited  from  March 31 of the  year in which  the  first  installment  is
     payable through the end of the month before payment of the second and third
     installments is actually made, respectively.

(b)  Deferral of Payments.  Subject to the terms and  provisions  of  applicable
     insurance  and other laws, a  Participant  may elect in writing at any time
     prior to December 31 of the year preceding the year in which an installment
     of an award  would  otherwise  be paid to defer  up to 100  percent  of the
     payment  of any Earned  Award.  MONY  shall  credit or debit each  deferred
     amount  with an  interest  rate  equivalent  to the  gains or  losses,  and
     expenses,  if any,  that would have  accrued had the dollar  amount of such
     credits been  invested in the funds,  excluding  the MONY Stock Fund,  then
     available  under  the  Excess  Benefit  Plan  for  Employees  of MONY  Life
     Insurance  Company in accordance with the  Participant's  credit allocation
     election at the time such debit or credit is made.  The  Participant  shall
     not have any rights in any  investments  MONY  might make to provide  funds
     from which to pay deferred compensation amounts, nor shall MONY be required
     to make any  investments  on the  Employee's  behalf to provide such funds.
     MONY reserves the right to change the manner of crediting  interest for all
     future  credits  or to  limit  the  credits  that  can be  subject  to this
     election.

(c)  Payments Upon Death, Retirement or Disability of a Participant.

     (i)  Each Participant may designate a beneficiary or  beneficiaries  (which
          beneficiary  may be an entity other than a natural  person) to receive
          any payments which may be made following the Participant's death. Such
          designation may be changed or canceled at any time without the consent
          of the beneficiary.  The designation,  change or cancellation  must be
          made in a form  approved by the  Committee  and shall not be effective
          until received by the Committee.  If no beneficiary has been named, or
          the designated beneficiary or beneficiaries shall have predeceased the
          Participant,  the beneficiary shall be the Participant's spouse or, if
          no spouse survives the Participant,  the  Participant's  estate.  If a
          Participant  designates more than one beneficiary,  the rights of such
          beneficiaries shall be payable in equal shares, unless the Participant
          has clearly indicated otherwise.

     (ii) As  soon  as  practicable   following  a  Participant's   death,   the
          Participant's  beneficiary  shall  be paid (A) all  previously  unpaid
          Earned Awards in respect of any vested Performance Units, with accrued
          interest, and (B) the value of any outstanding  Performance Units held
          by such Participant at the time of death,  computed in accordance with
          the following sentence. All outstanding  Performance Units held by the
          Participant  at  the  time  of  death  shall  be  valued  as  soon  as
          practicable  following the  completion of the  applicable  Performance
          Cycle and paid in a lump sum on a  pro-rated  basis  (with pro  ration
          through the date of the Participant's death).

     (iii)In the  event  of a  Participant's  Retirement  during  a  Performance
          Cycle,  all outstanding  Performance  Units held by the Participant at
          the  time of  Retirement  shall be  valued  at the  completion  of the
          applicable  Performance  Cycle  and  paid in a lump sum  pro-rated  by
          multiplying the Earned Award by a fraction,  the numerator or which is
          the number of calendar days in the applicable  Performance Cycle up to
          and  including  the  date  of the  Participant's  Retirement  and  the
          denominator  of which is the  total  number  of  calendar  days in the
          Performance Cycle.

     (iv) Upon  a  Participant's  Disability,   the  Committee  shall  have  the
          discretion to determine the treatment of the Participant's outstanding
          Performance   Units  (subject  to  any   contractual   rights  of  the
          Participant).

(d)  Change in Control.  "Change in Control" shall have the meaning given in the
     Change in Control Agreements  referred to on page 12 of the Company's Proxy
     Statement  for the May 15,  2002  Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders.  Upon a
     Change in Control, the Performance Units shall be treated as required under
     such agreements.



                                      B-3


(e)  Expiration, Cancellation and Forfeiture of Performance Units.

     (i)  Upon  Payment.  Upon the  completion  of each  Performance  Cycle  and
          payment of any  amounts  payable  under the  applicable  Earned  Value
          schedule (or upon death, Retirement or Disability of a Participant, or
          Change in Control,  and payment in accordance  with the  subparagraphs
          (c) or (d), above), the related  Performance Units shall automatically
          expire and be cancelled  without  further action of the Company or the
          Committee.

     (ii) Upon  Termination of Employment  for Other Reasons.  In the event that
          the Participant leaves the employ of the Company before the completion
          of a Performance Cycle other than in the circumstances  referred to in
          subparagraphs (c) or (d), above, any unvested  Performance Units shall
          be forfeited and  automatically be cancelled without further action of
          the Company or the Committee.


SECTION 6.  GENERAL PROVISIONS.

(a)  Subject to the approval of the  Company's  shareholders,  the Plan shall be
     effective with respect to calendar  years  beginning on or after January 1,
     2002.

(b)  The Committee  may, from time to time,  amend,  suspend or terminate any or
     all of the  provisions of the Plan,  but no such  amendment,  suspension or
     termination  shall  adversely  affect  the rights of any  Participant  with
     respect to awards then outstanding.

(c)  Nothing  contained in the Plan shall prohibit the Company from establishing
     other  additional  incentive  compensation  arrangements  for  one or  more
     employees of the Company or from paying  compensation  outside of the terms
     of this Plan,  whether  or not such  compensation  qualifies  for a federal
     income tax deduction under Section 162(m).

(d)  Nothing  in the Plan shall be deemed to give any  Participant  the right to
     remain  employed by the Company or to limit,  in any way,  the right of the
     Company to terminate, or to change the terms, of a Participant's employment
     with the Company at any time.

(e)  In the  administration of the Plan, neither the Committee nor any person to
     whom  the   Committee   lawfully   delegates   administrative   powers  and
     responsibilities  shall  be  liable  for  any  act or  action,  whether  of
     commission  or  omission  (i) by such  individual  except in  circumstances
     involving actual bad faith, or (ii) by any officer, agent or employee.

(f)  The Plan shall be unfunded and the obligations  under the Plan shall not be
     secured by any security interest,  pledge or encumbrance on any property of
     the Company.

(g)  No payment obligation under the Plan shall bear any interest, other than as
     specified in Section 5.

(h)  The Plan shall be governed by and construed in accordance  with the laws of
     Delaware, without regard to choice-of-law rules.

(i)  Entitlement  to  Performance  Units shall not be deemed  automatic  for any
     officer.

(j)  Deferrals or  distributions  under this Plan shall be subject to applicable
     federal,  state or local income and employment  taxes and any other amounts
     that the  Company  is  required  by law to deduct  and  withhold  from such
     payment.

(k)  Conflict  with  Contracts.  This Plan is  intended  to be  consistent  with
     existing  Employment  Agreements and Change in Control  Agreements.  In the
     event of any conflict between any provision of this Plan and any Employment
     Agreement or Change in Control  Agreement to which a  Participant  may be a
     party, the terms of such Agreement shall control.




                                      B-4


                                    EXHIBIT C
                               THE MONY GROUP INC.
                             2002 STOCK OPTION PLAN


SECTION 1.  PURPOSE.

The MONY Group Inc.  2002 Stock Option Plan is intended to advance the interests
of the Company and its stockholders by attracting,  retaining and motivating key
personnel of the Company and its  Subsidiaries  upon whose judgment,  initiative
and effort the Company is largely  dependent for the  successful  conduct of its
business,  and to  encourage  and enable  such  persons to acquire  and retain a
proprietary  interest in the Company by ownership of its stock. The Plan is also
intended to further the goals of the Company's  Stock  Ownership  Guidelines for
its  officers  and  directors.  Options  granted  under  the Plan may  either be
"incentive stock options" intended to qualify as such under the Internal Revenue
Code, or "nonqualified stock options," which are not intended to so qualify.


SECTION 2.  DEFINITIONS.

(a)  "Board" means the Board of Directors of the Company.

(b)  "Cause" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 9.3 hereof.

(c)  "Change in Control" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 10.2
     hereof.

(d)  "Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

(e)  "Common  Stock" means the common  stock of the Company,  par value $.01 per
     share.

(f)  "Committee" means the Human Resources Committee of the Board, or such other
     committee or subcommittee of the Board appointed by the Board to administer
     the Plan from time to time.

(g)  "Company" means The MONY Group Inc., a Delaware corporation.

(h)  "Date of  Grant"  means the date on which an Option  becomes  effective  in
     accordance with Section 6.1 hereof.

(i)  "Eligible Person" means any person who is an Employee,  officer,  director,
     insurance agent, consultant or advisor of the Company or any Subsidiary, as
     determined  by the  Committee,  or any  person  who  is  determined  by the
     Committee to be a prospective Employee, officer, director, insurance agent,
     consultant or advisor of the Company or any Subsidiary.

(j)  "Employee" means any person who is considered an employee of the Company or
     any Subsidiary for purposes of Treasury Regulation ss. 1.421-7(h).

(k)  "Exchange Act" means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.

(l)  "Fair Market Value" of a share of Common Stock as of a given date means the
     closing  sales price of the Common Stock on the New York Stock  Exchange as
     reflected on the composite index on the trading date immediately  preceding
     the date as of which Fair Market Value is to be  determined.  If the Common
     Stock is not listed on the New York  Stock  Exchange  as of such date,  the
     Committee  shall  determine in good faith the Fair Market Value in whatever
     manner it considers appropriate.

(m)  "Incentive  Stock Option" means a stock option  granted under the Plan that
     is  intended  to meet the  requirements  of section 422 of the Code and the
     regulations promulgated thereunder.

(n)  "Nonqualified  Stock  Option"  means a stock option  granted under the Plan
     that is not an Incentive Stock Option.

(o)  "Option"  means an Incentive  Stock Option or a  Nonqualified  Stock Option
     granted under the Plan.

(p)  "Option  Agreement" means an agreement  between the Company and an Optionee
     under which the Optionee may purchase Common Stock under the Plan.

(q)  "Optionee"  means an  Eligible  Person to whom an Option  has been  granted
     under the Plan.

(r)  "Option  Price" means the price at which each share of Common Stock subject
     to an Option may be purchased,  determined  in accordance  with Section 6.2
     hereof.

(s)  "Plan" means The MONY Group Inc. 2002 Stock Option Plan.

(t)  "Section  7312(w)"  means Section 7312 (w) of the New York State  Insurance
     Laws, as amended from time to time.



                                      C-1


(u)  "Subsidiary"  means any  entity  affiliated  with the  Company by direct or
     indirect  ownership of interests  that is  designated by the Committee as a
     Subsidiary for purposes of the Plan: PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that in the case of
     Incentive Stock Options, "Subsidiary" shall mean a "subsidiary corporation"
     of the Company within the meaning of section 424(f) of the Code.


SECTION 3.  ADMINISTRATION.

3.1  Committee Members.  The Plan shall be administered by a Committee comprised
     of no fewer than two directors selected by the Board.  Solely to the extent
     deemed  necessary or advisable by the Board,  each  Committee  member shall
     meet the definition of a "nonemployee  director" for purposes of Rule 16b-3
     under the Exchange Act and of an "outside director" under section 162(m) of
     the Code.  The Board shall also have the  authority  to exercise the powers
     and duties of the Committee under the Plan.

3.2  Committee  Authority.  Subject to the express  provisions of the Plan,  the
     Committee  shall have the authority,  in its  discretion,  to determine the
     Eligible  Persons to whom an Option shall be granted,  the time or times at
     which an Option  shall be  granted,  the  number of shares of Common  Stock
     subject  to each  Option,  the Option  Price of the shares  subject to each
     Option and the time or times when each Option shall become  exercisable and
     the duration of the exercise period.  Subject to the express  provisions of
     the  Plan,  the  Committee  shall  also  have  discretionary  authority  to
     interpret the Plan, to prescribe,  amend and rescind rules and  regulations
     relating to it, to determine the provisions of each Option  Agreement,  and
     to make all the determinations necessary or advisable in the administration
     of the Plan. All such actions and  determinations by the Committee shall be
     conclusively  binding for all purposes  and upon all persons.  No Committee
     member shall be liable for any action or  determination  made in good faith
     with respect to the Plan, any Option or any Option  Agreement  entered into
     hereunder.

3.3  Delegation of Authority.  The Committee shall have the right,  from time to
     time,  to delegate to one or more  officers of the Company the authority of
     the Committee to grant and  determine  the terms and  conditions of Options
     awarded under the Plan,  subject to such limitations as the Committee shall
     determine,  as and in the manner required by Section 157(c) of the Delaware
     General Corporation Law; PROVIDED,  HOWEVER,  that no such authority may be
     delegated with respect to Options awarded to any member of the Board or any
     Optionee who the  Committee  determines  may be covered by Rule 16b-3 under
     the Exchange Act or section 162(m) of the Code.

3.4  Grants  to  Non-Employee  Directors.  Awards  of  Options  to  non-employee
     directors  under the Plan shall be approved by the Board.  With  respect to
     awards to such directors,  all rights, powers and authorities vested in the
     Committee  under the Plan shall instead be exercised by the Board,  and all
     provisions of the Plan relating to the Committee  shall be interpreted in a
     manner  consistent  with the foregoing by treating any such  reference as a
     reference to the Board for such purpose.


SECTION 4.  SHARES OF STOCK SUBJECT TO PLAN.

4.1  Number of Shares.  Subject to  adjustment  pursuant  to the  provisions  of
     Section 4.3 hereof,  the maximum aggregate number of shares of Common Stock
     that may be issued and sold  hereunder  shall be  5,000,000  shares.  If an
     Option  shall  terminate  or expire for any  reason  without  being  wholly
     exercised,  the number of shares to which such Option  termination  relates
     shall again be available  for  issuance  under the Plan.  In addition,  any
     shares of Common Stock  exchanged by an Optionee as full or partial payment
     to the Company of the Option Price or tax  withholding  upon exercise of an
     Option  shall not be  deducted  from the  number of shares of Common  Stock
     available  for issuance  under the Plan from time to time.  Notwithstanding
     the foregoing,  the number of shares of Common Stock that may be issued and
     sold under  Incentive  Stock Options shall be limited to 5,000,000  shares.
     Shares  of  Common  Stock  issued  and sold  under  the Plan may be  either
     authorized but unissued shares or shares held in the Company's treasury.

4.2  Individual  Limit. The maximum number of shares of Common Stock that may be
     subject to Options  granted to any Optionee  during any one  calendar  year
     shall be 1,000,000 shares, subject to adjustment as provided in Section 4.3
     hereof.

4.3  Adjustments.  In the  event of a  reorganization,  recapitalization,  stock
     split, stock dividend,  combination of shares, merger or consolidation,  or
     the  sale,  conveyance,  or  other  transfer  by  the  Company  of  all  or
     substantially  all of its  assets,  or any other  change  in the  corporate
     structure  or shares of the  Company,  pursuant to any of which  events the
     then  outstanding  shares of Common Stock are split up or combined,  or are
     changed into, become exchangeable at the holder's election for other shares
     of  stock  or  any  other  consideration,  or in  the  case  of  any  other
     transaction  described in section 424(a) of the Code, the Committee  shall,
     in the manner that it shall deem to be equitable  and  appropriate,  change
     (i) the maximum aggregate number and kind of shares which may be issued and
     sold under Section 4.1 hereof,



                                      C-2


     (ii) the  maximum  number and kind of shares that may be granted to any one
     individual  under  Section  4.2  hereof,  and (iii) the  number and kind of
     shares (including by substitution of shares of another corporation) subject
     to the Options and/or the Option Price of such shares.  In the event of any
     merger,  consolidation,  reorganization or similar corporate event in which
     shares of the Common  Stock are to be  exchanged  for  payment of cash (the
     "Cash Consideration"),  the Committee may, in its discretion at the time of
     the event, (a) make equitable  adjustments as provided above, or (b) cancel
     any  outstanding  Option in exchange for payment in cash of an amount equal
     to the excess (if any) of (1) the Cash Consideration per share over (2) the
     Option Price per share, multiplied by the shares underlying such Option.


SECTION 5.  ELIGIBILITY.

All Eligible  Persons are eligible to receive  grants of Options under the Plan.
The Committee shall, in its sole  discretion,  determine and designate from time
to time those Eligible  Persons who are to be granted an Option.  Only Employees
of the  Company or any  "subsidiary  corporation"  within the meaning of section
424(f) of the Code shall be eligible for the grant of Incentive Stock Options.


SECTION 6.  TERMS OF STOCK OPTIONS.

6.1  Grant of Options.  An Option may be granted to any Eligible Person selected
     by the Committee.  The grant of an Option shall first be effective upon the
     date it is approved by the  Committee,  except to the extent the  Committee
     shall specify a later date upon which the grant of an Option shall first be
     effective.  Each  Option  shall be  designated,  at the  discretion  of the
     Committee,  as either an  Incentive  Stock Option or a  Nonqualified  Stock
     Option. The Company and the Optionee, if the Committee so determines, shall
     execute an Option Agreement which shall set forth such terms and conditions
     of the Option as may be determined  by the Committee to be consistent  with
     the Plan, and which may include additional provisions and restrictions that
     are not inconsistent with the Plan.

6.2  Option  Price.  The Option  Price  shall be  determined  by the  Committee,
     provided  that the Option  Price  shall not be less than 100 percent of the
     Fair  Market  Value  of a share  of  Common  Stock  on the  Date of  Grant.
     Notwithstanding  any  provision  of the Plan to the  contrary,  other  than
     Section  4.3,  the  Committee  shall not have the  authority  to reduce the
     Option Price of an outstanding  Option at any time, whether by amendment or
     by  cancellation  and  substitution,  unless  authorized  in advance by the
     Company's shareholders.

6.3  Vesting;  Term of Options.  An Option shall vest and become  exercisable in
     the manner and subject to such conditions provided by the Committee and set
     forth in the Option Agreement.  The Committee, in its sole discretion,  may
     accelerate the vesting of any Option at any time. The period during which a
     vested  Option  may be  exercised  shall be  determined  by the  Committee,
     subject  to a  maximum  term of ten  years  from the Date of Grant and such
     other  limitations  as may  apply  upon the  termination  of an  Optionee's
     employment or other  service or as otherwise  specified by the Committee in
     the Option Agreement, as provided in Section 9 hereof.

6.4  Limited  Transferability  of Options.  All Options shall be nontransferable
     except (i) upon the Optionee's death, by the Optionee's will or the laws of
     descent and distribution or (ii) in the case of Nonqualified  Stock Options
     only,  on a  case-by-case  basis as may be approved by the Committee in its
     discretion,  in  accordance  with  the  terms  provided  below.  An  Option
     Agreement for a Nonqualified Stock Option may provide that the Optionee may
     be  permitted  to,  during  his or her  lifetime  and  subject to the prior
     approval of the Committee at the time of proposed transfer, transfer all or
     part of the Option to or for the benefit of the  Optionee's  family members
     (as  defined  in the  Option  Agreement  in a  manner  consistent  with the
     requirements  for the Form S-8 registration  statement).  The transfer of a
     Nonqualified Stock Option may be subject to such other terms and conditions
     as the Committee may in its discretion impose from time to time,  including
     a condition  that the portion of the Option to be transferred be vested and
     exercisable  by the  Optionee  at the  time  of  the  transfer.  Subsequent
     transfers of an Option shall be  prohibited  other than by will or the laws
     of descent and distribution upon the death of the transferee.

6.5  Forfeiture of Options.  The  Committee  may provide in an Option  Agreement
     that (a) the Company may cancel, suspend, or otherwise limit any Options if
     the Optionee engages in activity that is detrimental to the Company and (b)
     in the event an Optionee  engages in activity  that is  detrimental  to the
     Company  following any exercise of an Option,  the Company may rescind such
     exercise with the Optionee  being required to pay to the Company the amount
     of any gain realized upon exercise.

6.6  Section 7312(w) Limitation.  Notwithstanding anything elsewhere in the Plan
     or  any  Option  Agreement  to  the  contrary,  in  order  to  satisfy  the
     requirements  of Section  7312(w) of the New York State  Insurance Laws, no
     Option  granted under the Plan to any officer,  director or employee of the
     Company  or any  Subsidiary  may be  exercised,  transferred  or  otherwise
     disposed of by the Optionee prior to December 24, 2003,  which is the fifth
     anniversary of the




                                      C-3


     date of distribution of consideration  to  policyholders  under the plan of
     reorganization  relating  to the  Company.  To the  extent  that any Option
     becomes  vested prior to December  24,  2003,  such Option shall not become
     exercisable  prior to such date.  To the extent that the period of exercise
     of any vested Option would otherwise expire prior to December 24, 2003 (due
     to termination  of employment or otherwise),  such period of exercise shall
     continue until the expiration of 30 days following such date. The foregoing
     provisions  of this  Section  6.6  shall  be  subject  to the  terms of any
     employment, severance or change in control agreement between the Company or
     any Subsidiary and an Optionee.


SECTION 7.  ADDITIONAL RULES FOR ISOS.

7.1  Annual Limits. No Incentive Stock Option shall be granted to an Optionee as
     a result of which the  aggregate  Fair Market Value  (determined  as of the
     Date of Grant) of the stock with respect to which "incentive stock options"
     are  exercisable for the first time in any calendar year under the Plan and
     any other stock option plans of the Company, any Subsidiary,  or any parent
     corporation,  would exceed $100,000,  determined in accordance with section
     422(d) of the Code. This limitation shall be applied by taking options into
     account  in the  order in  which  granted.  Any  Option  intended  to be an
     Incentive  Stock  Option  that is  granted  in excess of such  limit  shall
     instead be treated as a Nonqualified Stock Option.

7.2  Termination of Employment.  An Incentive  Stock Option may provide that the
     vested  portion of such Option may be exercised not later than three months
     following  termination  of  employment of the Optionee with the Company and
     all   Subsidiaries,   subject  to  special  rules  relating  to  death  and
     disability,  as  and to  the  extent  determined  by  the  Committee  to be
     consistent  with the  requirements  of section 422 of the Code and Treasury
     Regulations thereunder.

7.3  Other Terms and Conditions;  Nontransferability. Any Incentive Stock Option
     granted  hereunder shall contain such additional terms and conditions,  not
     inconsistent  with the  terms of this  Plan,  as are  deemed  necessary  or
     desirable by the  Committee,  which terms,  together with the terms of this
     Plan,  shall be intended  and  interpreted  to cause such  Incentive  Stock
     Option to qualify as an  "incentive  stock option" under section 422 of the
     Code and  Treasury  Regulations  thereunder.  An  Option  Agreement  for an
     Incentive Stock Option shall provide that such Option shall be treated as a
     Nonqualified   Stock  Option  to  the  extent  that  certain   requirements
     applicable  to  "incentive  stock  options"  under  the Code  shall  not be
     satisfied.  An Incentive Stock Option shall by its terms be nontransferable
     otherwise  than by will or by the laws of  descent  and  distribution,  and
     shall be  exercisable  during  the  lifetime  of an  Optionee  only by such
     Optionee.

7.4  Disqualifying Dispositions.  If shares of Common Stock acquired by exercise
     of an Incentive Stock Option are disposed of within two years following the
     Date of Grant or one year  following  the  transfer  of such  shares to the
     Optionee  upon  exercise,  the  Optionee  shall,  promptly  following  such
     disposition,  notify  the  Company in writing of the date and terms of such
     disposition and provide such other information regarding the disposition as
     the Committee may reasonably require.


SECTION 8.  EXERCISE OF OPTIONS.

8.1  Option Exercise; Withholding. Subject to such terms and conditions as shall
     be specified in an Option Agreement, an Option may be exercised in whole or
     in part at any time,  with respect to whole shares only,  within the period
     permitted  for the  exercise  thereof,  and shall be exercised by notice of
     intent  to  exercise  the  Option in the  manner  specified  by the  Option
     Agreement,  and by  payment  in full to the  Company  of the  amount of the
     Option  Price for the number of shares of the Common  Stock with respect to
     which the Option is then being exercised. Payment of the Option Price shall
     be made,  at the  discretion  of the  Committee  as specified in the Option
     Agreement,  by (i)  payment in cash or cash  equivalent  acceptable  to the
     Committee,  (ii) payment in Common Stock that has been held by the Optionee
     for at least six  months (or such other  period as the  Committee  may deem
     appropriate  for purposes of applicable  accounting  rules),  valued at the
     Fair  Market  Value  of  such  shares  on the  date  of  exercise,  (iii) a
     broker-assisted  "cashless  exercise,"  (iv) a  combination  of the methods
     described  above,  or (v)  such  other  method  as may be  approved  by the
     Committee and set forth in the Option Agreement.  In addition to and at the
     time of payment of the Option Price,  the Optionee shall pay to the Company
     the full amount of all federal and state income, employment and other taxes
     required to be withheld in  connection  with such  exercise,  in any manner
     consistent  with the foregoing for the exercise of Options that is approved
     by the Committee and set forth in the Option Agreement.

8.2  Conditions  to  Exercise.  The  Company  shall not be  required to issue or
     deliver  any shares of Common  Stock  purchased  upon the  exercise  of any
     Option granted hereunder or any portion thereof prior to fulfillment of all
     of the following  conditions:  (i) the  completion of any  registration  or
     other qualification of such shares, under any federal or state law or under
     the rulings or regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission or any
     other governmental




                                      C-4


     regulatory  body,  that the  Committee  shall in its sole  discretion  deem
     necessary  or  advisable;  (ii)  the  obtaining  of any  approval  or other
     clearance from any federal or state governmental agency which the Committee
     shall in its sole discretion determine to be necessary or advisable;  (iii)
     the lapse of such  reasonable  period of time following the exercise of the
     Option as the  Committee  from time to time may  establish  for  reasons of
     administrative  convenience;  (iv)  satisfaction  by  the  Optionee  of all
     applicable withholding taxes or other withholding  liabilities;  and (v) if
     required  by the  Committee,  in its sole  discretion,  the  receipt by the
     Company from an Optionee of (a) a representation in writing that the shares
     of Common Stock  received upon exercise of an Option are being acquired for
     investment  and  not  with  a view  to  distribution  and  (b)  such  other
     representations  and  warranties as are deemed  necessary by counsel to the
     Company.  The  Company  reserves  the right to legend any  certificate  for
     shares of Common Stock,  conditioning  sales of such shares upon compliance
     with applicable  federal and state securities laws and regulations or other
     conditions under the Plan.


SECTION 9.  TERMINATION OF SERVICE.

9.1  Death.  Unless  otherwise  provided by the  Committee  and set forth in the
     Option  Agreement,  if an Optionee  shall die at any time after the Date of
     Grant and while he is an Eligible  Person,  the Option  shall  become fully
     vested and exercisable,  and the executor or administrator of the estate of
     the  decedent,  or the person or persons to whom an Option  shall have been
     validly  transferred in accordance with Section 6.4 hereof pursuant to will
     or the laws of descent and  distribution,  shall have the right to exercise
     the  Option  during  the  period  ending  one  year  after  the date of the
     Optionee's death (subject to the term of the Option).

9.2  Disability. Unless otherwise provided by the Committee and set forth in the
     Option  Agreement,  if an  Optionee's  employment or other service with the
     Company or any Subsidiary  shall be terminated as a result of his permanent
     and total  disability  (within the meaning of section 22(e)(3) of the Code)
     at any time after the Date of Grant and while he is an Eligible Person, the
     Option shall become fully vested and  exercisable,  and the Optionee (or in
     the case of an Optionee who is legally incapacitated, his guardian or legal
     representative)  shall  have the right to  exercise  the  Option  until the
     expiration of the period  ending one year after the date of his  disability
     (subject to the term of the Option).

9.3  Termination for Cause.  Unless otherwise  provided by the Committee and set
     forth in the Option Agreement, if an Optionee's employment or other service
     with the  Company or any  Subsidiary  shall be  terminated  for Cause,  the
     Optionee's  right to exercise  any  unexercised  portion of an Option shall
     immediately  terminate  and  all  rights  thereunder  shall  cease.  Unless
     otherwise  provided by the Committee and set forth in the Option Agreement,
     termination  for "Cause"  shall have the meaning  given to such term in any
     employment agreement between the Company or any Subsidiary and the Optionee
     in effect at the time of termination  of  employment.  In the event that no
     such agreement is in effect,  "Cause" shall mean (i) the willful failure by
     the  Optionee to perform  substantially  his duties as an Employee or other
     service  provider  (other  than due to physical  or mental  illness)  after
     reasonable  notice to the  Optionee of such  failure,  (ii) the  Optionee's
     engaging  in serious  misconduct  that is  injurious  to the Company or any
     Subsidiary in any way, including,  without limitation,  by way of damage to
     their respective  reputations or standings in their respective  industries,
     (iii) the Optionee  having been  convicted of, or having  entered a plea of
     nolo contendere to, a crime that constitutes a felony or (iv) the breach by
     the Optionee of any written  covenant or agreement  with the Company or any
     Subsidiary not to disclose any information pertaining to the Company or any
     Subsidiary  or  not  to  compete  or  interfere  with  the  Company  or any
     Subsidiary.  Subject to the terms of any employment  agreement  between the
     Company or any  Subsidiary and the Optionee,  the Committee  shall have the
     power to determine  whether the Optionee has been  terminated for cause and
     the date  upon  which  such  termination  for  cause  occurs,  and any such
     determination shall be final, conclusive and binding upon the Optionee.

9.4  Other  Termination of Service.  Unless otherwise  provided by the Committee
     and set forth in the Option Agreement, if an Optionee's employment or other
     service  with the Company or any  Subsidiary  shall be  terminated  for any
     reason other than death,  permanent and total disability or termination for
     cause,  the  Optionee  shall have the right,  until the  expiration  of the
     period  ending 90 days after such  termination  (subject to the term of the
     Option), to exercise an Option to the extent that it was vested on the date
     of such  termination.  For purposes of this Section 9.4, an Optionee  shall
     not be considered to have  terminated  employment or other service with the
     Company  or any  Subsidiary  until  the  expiration  of the  period  of any
     military,  sick leave or other bona fide leave of absence,  up to a maximum
     period of 90 days (or such  greater  period  during  which the  Optionee is
     guaranteed reemployment either by statute or contract).


SECTION 10.  CHANGE IN CONTROL.

10.1 Change in Control. The Committee may provide in an Option Agreement for the
     effect of a Change in Control on an Option. Such provisions may include any
     one or more of the following: (i) the acceleration of vesting or




                                      C-5


     exercisability  of an Option,  (ii) the extension of the period of exercise
     of an Option,  (iii) the effects on an Option of  termination of employment
     or service in connection  with a Change in Control,  (iv) provision for the
     cash or other settlement of an Option,  (v) provision for the assumption of
     Options by the surviving, successor or transferee corporation, or (vi) such
     other  modification  or  adjustment  to an  Option as the  Committee  deems
     appropriate  to  preserve  the  rights  of  the  Optionee,  to  the  extent
     practicable,  in connection with a Change in Control.  Notwithstanding  the
     foregoing,  the terms of  Options  in  connection  with a Change in Control
     shall be subject  to the terms of any  employment,  severance  or change in
     control agreement between the Company or any Subsidiary and the Optionee.

10.2 Definition  of Change in  Control.  For  purposes  of the Plan,  "Change in
     Control" shall mean:

     (i)  an acquisition by any individual,  entity or group (within the meaning
          of Section  13(d)(3) or 14(d)(2) of the  Exchange  Act (a "Person") of
          beneficial  ownership  (within the  meaning of Rule 13d-3  promulgated
          under the Exchange Act) of shares of outstanding  voting securities of
          the Company  entitled to vote  generally  in the election of directors
          (the "Outstanding  Voting  Securities")  which, when combined with any
          other securities owned  beneficially by the acquirer,  would result in
          such  acquirer  beneficially  owning  twenty  percent (20%) or more of
          either (A) the then outstanding  shares of common stock of the Company
          or (B) the  combined  voting  power  of the  then  Outstanding  Voting
          Securities;  excluding,  however,  the following:  (1) any acquisition
          directly from the Company,  other than an acquisition by virtue of the
          exercise  of a  conversion  privilege  unless  the  security  being so
          converted  was itself  acquired  directly  from the  Company,  (2) any
          acquisition  by the  Company  and (3) any  acquisition  by an employee
          benefit plan (or related trust) sponsored or maintained by the Company
          or any Subsidiary;

     (ii) at any time following the date hereof,  individuals who as of the date
          hereof  constitute the Board (and any new directors  whose election by
          the Board or nomination for election by the Company's shareholders was
          approved by a vote of at least  two-thirds (2/3) of the directors then
          still in office who either  were  directors  as of the date  hereof or
          whose election or nomination  for election was so approved)  cease for
          any reason (except for death,  disability or voluntary  retirement) to
          constitute a majority thereof;

     (iii)the consummation of a transaction  approved by the shareholders of the
          Company  that is a merger,  consolidation,  reorganization  or similar
          corporate  transaction,  whether or not the  Company is the  surviving
          corporation in such transaction,  other than a merger,  consolidation,
          or  reorganization  that results in the Outstanding  Voting Securities
          immediately prior thereto continuing to represent (either by remaining
          outstanding  or by  being  converted  into  voting  securities  of the
          surviving entity) at least eighty percent (80%) of the combined voting
          power of the  voting  securities  of the  Company  (or such  surviving
          entity)  outstanding  immediately  after such  merger,  consolidation,
          reorganization or transaction;

     (iv) the consummation of a transaction  approved by the shareholders of the
          Company  that  is  (A)  the  sale  or  other  disposition  of  all  or
          substantially  all of the assets (by way of  reinsurance or otherwise)
          of the Company or (B) a complete  liquidation  or  dissolution  of the
          Company; or

     (v)  adoption  by the Board of a  resolution  to the effect that any Person
          has taken actions which, if  consummated,  would result in such Person
          acquiring  effective  control  of  the  business  and  affairs  of the
          Company, subject to the consummation of the transactions  contemplated
          by such actions.


SECTION 11.  EFFECTIVE DATE, TERMINATION AND AMENDMENT.

11.1 Effective  Date;  Stockholder  Approval.  The Plan shall  become  effective
     following  its  adoption by the Board upon the  approval of the Plan by the
     stockholders  of the  Company  at the  Company's  2002  annual  meeting  of
     stockholders.

11.2 Termination and Amendment. The Plan shall terminate on the date immediately
     preceding  the tenth  anniversary  of the date the Plan is  adopted  by the
     Board.  The Board may,  in its sole  discretion  and at any  earlier  date,
     terminate the Plan.  Notwithstanding  the foregoing,  no termination of the
     Plan shall in any manner affect any Option theretofore  granted without the
     consent of the  Optionee or the  permitted  transferee  of the Option.  The
     Board  may at any time and from time to time and in any  respect,  amend or
     modify the Plan or any Option.  Solely to the extent  deemed  necessary  or
     advisable  by the Board,  for purposes of  complying  with  sections 422 or
     162(m)  of the Code or rules of any  securities  exchange  or for any other
     reason,  the  Board  may seek the  approval  of any such  amendment  by the
     Company's  stockholders.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  no amendment or
     modification of the Plan or any Option shall in any manner adversely affect
     any Option  theretofore  granted without the consent of the Optionee or the
     permitted  transferee  of the  Option.  In  addition,  the Board shall not,
     without the approval of the Company's stockholders, amend the





                                      C-6



     provisions of Section 6.2 hereof  requiring  Option Prices of not less than
     Fair  Market  Value and  prohibiting  the  reduction  of  Option  Prices of
     outstanding options.


SECTION 12.  MISCELLANEOUS.

12.1 Employment  or Other  Service.  Nothing  in the  Plan,  in the grant of any
     Option or in any Option Agreement shall confer upon any Eligible Person the
     right to continue in the  capacity in which he is employed by or  otherwise
     provides  services  to  the  Company  or  any  Subsidiary.  Notwithstanding
     anything  contained in the Plan to the contrary,  unless otherwise provided
     in an Option Agreement, no Option shall be affected by any change of duties
     or position of the Optionee (including a transfer to or from the Company or
     any  Subsidiary),  so long as such  Optionee  continues  to be an  Eligible
     Person.

12.2 Rights as Stockholder. An Optionee or the permitted transferee of an Option
     shall have no rights as a stockholder with respect to any shares subject to
     such Option prior to the purchase of such shares by exercise of such Option
     as provided  herein.  Nothing  contained  herein or in the Option Agreement
     relating  to any  Option  shall  create  an  obligation  on the part of the
     Company to repurchase any shares of Common Stock purchased hereunder.

12.3 Other  Compensation  and Benefit Plans.  The adoption of the Plan shall not
     affect any other stock option or incentive or other  compensation  plans in
     effect for the Company or any  Subsidiary,  nor shall the Plan preclude the
     Company   from   establishing   any  other  forms  of  incentive  or  other
     compensation  for  employees  or service  providers  of the  Company or any
     Subsidiary.  The amount of any  compensation  deemed to be  received  by an
     Optionee  as a result  of the  exercise  of an Option or the sale of shares
     received upon such exercise shall not constitute  compensation with respect
     to which any other  employee  benefits  of such  Optionee  are  determined,
     including,  without limitation,  benefits under any bonus, pension,  profit
     sharing,  life insurance or salary  continuation  plan, except as otherwise
     specifically  determined  by the Board or the  Committee or provided by the
     terms of such plan.

12.4 Deferrals  of Payment.  The  Committee  may permit an Optionee to defer the
     receipt of shares of Common Stock that would  otherwise be  deliverable  to
     the  Optionee  upon  exercise of an Option.  If any such  deferral is to be
     permitted by the  Committee,  the Committee  shall  establish the rules and
     procedures relating to such deferral,  including,  without limitation,  the
     period of time in  advance of  exercise  when an  election  to defer may be
     made,  the time period of the  deferral and the events that would result in
     payment of the deferred amount, the interest or other earnings attributable
     to the  deferral  and the method of funding,  if any,  attributable  to the
     deferred amount.

12.5 Foreign  Jurisdictions.  The Committee may adopt,  amend and terminate such
     arrangements and grant such Options,  not  inconsistent  with the intent of
     the Plan,  as it may deem  necessary  or  desirable  to comply with or take
     advantage  of  tax,  securities,   regulatory  or  other  laws  of  foreign
     jurisdictions  with respect to Optionees who are subject to such laws.  The
     terms and conditions of such Options may vary from the terms and conditions
     that would otherwise be required by the Plan. In addition, the Committee is
     authorized to grant stock appreciation  rights or similar rights equivalent
     to  stock  options  if  necessary  to  comply  with  the  laws  of  foreign
     jurisdictions,  provided  that the exercise or base price thereof shall not
     be less  than the Fair  Market  Value  of the  Common  Stock on the Date of
     Grant.

12.6 Plan Binding on Successors. The Plan shall be binding upon the Company, its
     successors and assigns, and the Optionee,  his executor,  administrator and
     permitted transferees.

12.7 Severability. If any provision of the Plan or any Option Agreement shall be
     determined  to be  illegal  or  unenforceable  by any  court  of law in any
     jurisdiction,   the  remaining  provisions  hereof  and  thereof  shall  be
     severable  and  enforceable  in  accordance  with  their  terms,   and  all
     provisions shall remain enforceable in any other jurisdiction.

12.8 Governing Law. The validity and construction of this Plan and of the Option
     Agreements shall be governed by the laws of the State of Delaware,  without
     reference to conflicts of laws principles.




                                      C-7



  YOU MAY ACCESS INFORMATION ON-LINE ABOUT THE MONY GROUP INC. 24 HOURS A DAY.
      VISIT THE COMPANY'S WORLD WIDE WEB SITE AT WWW.MONY.COM FOR INVESTOR
INFORMATION, INCLUDING ACCESS TO INFORMATION ABOUT SHARES OF THE MONY GROUP INC.
                   HELD IN YOUR ACCOUNT AT THE TRANSFER AGENT.


         THE MONY GROUP INC.'S SHAREHOLDER PROXY HOTLINE IS AVAILABLE TO
          SERVE YOU WEEKDAYS FROM 8:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M., AND SATURDAY
                    FROM 8:00 A.M. TO 3:30 P.M. EASTERN TIME.


         U.S. AND CANADIAN SHAREHOLDERS CALL (TOLL FREE) 1-800-829-6554.

                  SHAREHOLDERS FROM OUTSIDE THE U.S. AND CANADA
                         CALL COLLECT 001-212-269-5550.
















[LOGO]    THIS PROXY STATEMENT IS PRINTED  ENTIRELY ON RECYCLED AND RECYCLABLE
          PAPER. SOY INK, RATHER THAN PETROLEUM-BASED INK, IS USED THROUGHOUT.





[Logo]THE
      MONY
      GROUP
c/o EquiServe Trust Company N.A.
PO Box 8222
Edison, NJ 08818-8222


P
                 PROXY SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS FOR THE
R
                  ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS ON MAY 15, 2002
O
        Lee M. Smith and Bart R. Schwartz,  or any of them individually and each
X       of them with the power of substitution,  are hereby appointed Proxies of
        the  undersigned  to vote all stock of The MONY Group Inc.  owned on the
Y       record date by the  undersigned at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders to
        be held at The St. Regis Hotel, 2 East 55th Street at Fifth Avenue,  New
        York City, at 9:30 a.m., local time, on Wednesday,  May 15, 2002, or any
        adjournment thereof,  upon such business as may properly come before the
        meeting,  including  the items on the  reverse  side of this form as set
        forth  in the  Notice  of  Annual  Meeting  of  Shareholders  and  Proxy
        Statement.

        ELECTION OF DIRECTORS: NOMINEES:

        01. G. Robert  Durham 02. James L.  Johnson 03.  Frederick W. Kanner 04.
        Kenneth M. Levine 05. David M. Thomas

        (SHARES  CANNOT BE VOTED UNLESS THIS PROXY FORM IS SIGNED AND  RETURNED,
        THE PROXY IS SUBMITTED BY TELEPHONE OR OVER THE INTERNET, THE SHARES ARE
        VOTED IN  PERSON,  OR  OTHER  ARRANGEMENTS  ARE MADE TO HAVE THE  SHARES
        REPRESENTED AT THE MEETING.)

        COMMENTS/CHANGE OF ADDRESS: (Please mark the box on the reverse side.)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                  --------------
                                                                   SEE REVERSE
                                                                      SIDE
                                                                  --------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            o FOLD AND DETACH HERE o



                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

        The Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  of The MONY Group Inc. will be held
        at The St. Regis  Hotel,  2 East 55th Street at Fifth  Avenue,  New York
        City, on Wednesday,  May 15, 2002, at 9:30 a.m., local time, to consider
        and act upon:

             1.   Election of five directors for a term of three years, or until
                  their successors are elected and qualified;
             2.   Ratification of the appointment of independent accountants;
             3.   Approval of The MONY Group Inc. 2002 Annual Incentive Plan for
                  Senior Executive Officers;
             4.   Approval  of The MONY Group Inc.  2002  Long-Term  Performance
                  Plan for Senior Executive Officers; and
             5.   Approval of The MONY Group Inc. 2002 Stock Option Plan.

             The  Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR items 1-5.

             Shareholders  of record as of the  close of  business  on March 18,
             2002 are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual  Meeting
             and any adjournment thereof.

                                         By Order of the Board of Directors

                                         /s/ LEE M. SMITH
                                         -----------------------------------
                                         Lee M. Smith
                                         Vice President and Corporate Secretary
                                         The MONY Group Inc., April 1, 2002

             OUR  ANNUAL  MEETING  WILL  ALSO  BE  WEBCAST  ON  OUR  WEBSITE  AT
             WWW.MONY.COM AT 9:30 A.M. (LOCAL TIME) ON MAY 15, 2002.



                                                                      |
                                                                      |     3652
                                                                      |______

                       _____
    PLEASE MARK YOUR  |
[X] VOTES AS IN THIS  |
    EXAMPLE.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2, 3, 4 AND 5.
               SHARES WILL BE SO VOTED UNLESS OTHERWISE INDICATED.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                        
1. Election of            FOR   WITHHELD                                               FOR     AGAINST    ABSTAIN
   Directors              [ ]     [ ]                     2. Ratification of           [ ]       [ ]         [ ]
  (see reverse)                                              the appointment of
                                                             PricewaterhouseCoopers
                                                             LLP as independent
                                                             accountants.
 For, except vote withheld from the following nominee(s):
                                                          3. Approval of The MONY      [ ]       [ ]         [ ]
                                                             Group Inc. 2002 Annual
                                                             Incentive Plan for Senior
                                                             Executive Officers.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



4. Approval of The MONY Group      FOR     AGAINST    ABSTAIN
   Inc. 2002 Long-Term             [ ]       [ ]         [ ]
   Performance Plan for Senior
   Executive Officers.

5. Approval of The MONY Group      [ ]       [ ]         [ ]
   Inc. 2002 Stock
   Option Plan.

Yes,  I  would  like  to  help     [ ]
reduce  company  expenses.   I
consent  to  future  access to
the Company's  annual  reports
in electronic form through the
Company's    Web    site    at
WWW.MONY.COM.   I   understand
that  the   Company   will  no
longer   distribute    printed
materials to me for any future
shareholder  meeting  with the
exception  of the annual proxy
statement and card.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

PLEASE USE THE REVERSE SIDE     [ ]
FOR CHANGE OF ADDRESS OR
COMMENTS.  PUT AN X IN THIS
BOX IF YOU HAVE WRITTEN ON
THE REVERSE SIDE.

SIGNATURE(S)                                               DATE
            ----------------------------------------------      ----------------
NOTE: Please sign exactly as your name or names appear  above.  If more than one
      owner,  all  shareholders  must sign. When signing as attorney,  executor,
      officer, trustee, or guardian, please give your full title as such.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            o FOLD AND DETACH HERE o




                               THE MONY GROUP INC.

                 VOTE YOUR SHARES VIA THE INTERNET OR TELEPHONE

Dear Shareholder:

The MONY Group Inc. encourages you to submit your proxy  electronically over the
Internet or the  telephone,  both of which are  available 24 hours a day,  seven
days a week. This eliminates the need to mail the proxy card.

      o    To submit your proxy electronically over the Internet,  go to the Web
           site:  http://www.eproxyvote.com/mny and follow the prompts. You must
           use the  control  number  printed  in the box  above  as well as your
           social security number to access this account.

      o    To submit your proxy by  telephone,  use a touch-tone  telephone  and
           call    1-877-779-8683.    Outside   the   U.S.   and   Canada   call
           001-201-536-8073.

Also,   if  you  have  any  questions  or  need   assistance  in  voting,   call
1-800-829-6554.  Shareholders  calling from outside the U.S. and Canada can call
collect 001-212-269-5550. Office hours are weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.,
and Saturday from 8:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. (EDT).


                  YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. THANK YOU FOR VOTING.