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DEATH or WEALTH TRANSFER TAX

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Title: DEATH or WEALTH TRANSFER TAX


1
DEATH or WEALTH TRANSFER TAX
  • ESTATE TAX
  • GIFT TAX
  • UNIFIED TRANSFER TAX SYSTEM
  • GENERATION SKIPPING TRANSFER
  • TAX

2
HISTORY
  • primary function to hinder the accumulation of
    wealth by family units redistribution of wealth
  • 1916 Congress imposed a tax on transfer of
    property triggered by the death of an individual
    Federal Estate Tax
  • loophole give away property before death
    Congress enacted first Federal Gift tax to
    prevent full scale avoidance of the estate tax
    (1924)

3
FEDERAL ESTATE TAX
  • often referred to as an excise tax on the
    transfer of decedents net wealth
  • TAX ON DECEDENTS ESTATE or on the value of all
    property owned at date of death (property fair
    market value)
  • Reduced by deductions for funeral and
    administrative expenses, debts, certain taxes and
    losses, unlimited charitable gifts as well as
    unlimited marital deductions (The Economic
    Recovery Tax Act of 1981)

4
FEDERAL ESTATE TAX
  • Since 1976 Federal Estate tax and Federal Gift
    tax became the unified transfer tax, (Tax Reform
    Act of 1976)
  • like an income tax, it is progressive
  • unlike the income tax, it is computed
    cumulatively
  • Taxable gifts made after December 31st, 1976 are
    added to the taxable estate to arrive at total
    taxable transfer

5
FEDERAL ESTATE TAX
  • All gift taxes paid on post-1976 bequests and
    certain tax credits are deducted from the
    tentative tax (tax on all gifts made to date)
    Federal estate tax due
  • UNIFIED CREDIT life time credit available for
    all taxable transfers enacted to reduce the
    effect of multiple taxation
  • Unified credit eroded with inflation Taxpayer
    Relief Act of 1997 (exemption increase to
    1,000,000)

6
FEDERAL ESTATE TAX
  • Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act
    of 2001 (slow phasing out of the estate tax
    2010 repealed)
  • CREDIT
    EXEMPTION EQUIVALENT

7
FEDERAL ESTATE TAX
  • EXAMPLE
  • no taxable gifts made prior to decedents death
    in 2002
  • Tentative tax on taxable estate is 470,000
  • Therefore, with unified tax credit the Federal
    estate tax / unified transfer tax due will be
    124,200

8
FEDERAL GIFT TAX
  • Purpose to prevent taxpayers from avoidance of
    the Federal estate tax
  • Donor allowed an annual exclusion of 10,000 per
    donee ( 11,000 in 2002)
  • i.e. Father gave each one of his five children
    11,000 for Easter in 2002 2003,
  • Overall, he transferred 110,000, but he made no
    taxable gifts
  • Unlimited marital and charitable deductions
  • Giftsplitting available to a married donor

9
State Local Transfer Taxes
  • Inheritance tax on the right to receive property
    at death (imposed on beneficiaries)
  • Inheritance tax rate is inversely related to the
    relationship between the decedent and the
    recipient as well as exemptions
  • Many states also impose estate taxes on the
    decedents estate (lower than federal)

10
State Local Transfer Taxes
  • CREDIT- any state estate taxes are credited
    against federal estate tax .however, the EGaTRR
    Act of 2001 will eventually eliminate it
  • Nine states impose a state gift tax, like the
    Federal gift tax they usually provide for
    lifetime exemptions and annual exclusions
  • State gift tax rates usually follow the pattern
    of state inheritance taxes

11
GENERATION SKIPPING TRANSFER TAX
  • Involves at least three generations of tax payers
  • direct skip an outright transfer of wealth for
    the sole benefit of persons at least two
    generations younger than the transferor
  • generation in between skips the tax
  • generally, a flat tax rate of 55 with exemption
    of 1,100,000 with no gift tax implications

12
DEATH TAX CONTROVERSY
  • CURRENT LAW
  • June 7th, 2001 President Bush signed into law the
    11-year, 1.35 trillion tax cut package causing
    estate tax to be repealed in 2010, but only for
    one year
  • How will estate tax repeal effect
  • charities- Ralph Wanger argues that many
    decedents will leave for their families
    previously set amount and the rest will go to
    their favorite causes.spillover effect may in
    fact increase charity giving (no death tax more
    to bequest)

13
Ralph Wangers view
  • Death tax has 2 functions,
  • To raise revenue for the government
  • not responsive constitutes about 2 of total
    tax revenue
  • Wealthy person confronts a marginal tax rate of
    76 24 of his income gets passed down to his
    heirs
  • Therefore, wealthy people prefer to take early
    retirements and burn their money
  • If death tax was repealed or reduced they might
    feel encouraged to work few extra years, generate
    lots of income tax and create new jobs

14
Ralph Wangers view
  • 2nd goal of taxation is to redistribute money
    for social engineering goals
  • Death tax established as a part of general
    populist revolution against the enormous wealth
    of Rockeffeller, Mellon(no income tax until 1908
    so fortunes grew w/o any benefit to the gvt.)
  • Death tax back then made sense... made up for
    lost taxes on such fortunes
  • However, todays fortunes are taxed on the
    individual and corporate leveltherefore death
    tax OVERKILL

15
DEATH TAX CONTROVERSY cont.
  • Impact on heirs inheritance affirmative
    action for rich kids
  • Moral argument heartless to compound familys
    grief with taxes
  • Gale and Slemrod argue that taxation after death
    is a convenient tax handle
  • No one is advocating for another tax that would
    replace the death tax
  • Estate tax meant to capture tax on previously
    accrued but unrealized capital gains

16
GALE and SLEMROD
  • Concentration of wealth estate tax to
    redistribute the wealthhowever, unrealistic to
    expect a tax raising 0.3 of GDP would seriously
    decrease inequalityperhaps increase it !
  • Impact on saving hard to determine since people
    are motivated by various factors in their giving
  • Impact on survival of small businesses small
    numbers pay estate taxes therefore unlikely why
    family businesses do not pass to the next
    generation

17
Where do we go from here?
  • Repeal the death tax and see what happens
  • could hurt non-profit organizations,
  • will reduce federal revenues,
  • might not even raise savings, labor supply or
    growth
  • create a loophole in regard to capital gains
  • do away with the most progressive federal tax
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