What you can leave to your heirs without paying federal estate tax is
a burning tax questions Congress is deliberating on amid the approach
of the fiscal cliff . Today a group of wealthy Americans put out a
proposal that would set the estate tax exemption at $2 million per
person, with a 45% teaser rate that would “rise on the largest
fortunes,” according to Mike Lapham, director of Responsible Wealth, a
project of the non-partisan, non-profit United for a Fair Economy, which
is shopping the proposal on Capitol Hill today.
The proposal has some big name backers: Warren Buffett, former
President Jimmy Carter, George Soros, Bill Gates Sr., John C. Bogle,
founder of the Vanguard Group and Robert Rubin, former secretary of the
Treasury. “A substantial estate tax along the lines of what’s being
discussed here can provide revenue at a time when our federal government
badly needs revenue,” said Rubin on a call to pitch the proposal to
Congressional staffers and the press.
“We have the choice of taxing a small percentage of the wealthiest
who certainly can afford it, or we can cut social programs for those who
need them,” said Abigail Disney, a philanthropist and filmmaker and
heir to the Disney fortune.
In 2012 (if you die in 2012) an individual can leave $5 million
federal estate tax free, and the tax rate on assets above that exemption
level is a flat 35%. If Congress does nothing, on 1/1/13 the exemption
level reverts to $1 million per person with a top rate of 55%. President
Barack Obama’s proposal is a $3.5 million per person exemption, with a
flat 45% rate.
“We think Obama’s proposal leaves too much on the table,” says
Lapham. If the estate tax law reverts to the $1 million exemption/55%
rate that would bring in $536 billion over the next decade. By
comparison, Obama’s proposal would bring in $256 billion less. “We’re
trying to find somewhere in between,” Lapham says.
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