
To taxpayers, the Economic
Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 may have meant income
tax cuts resulting in more current after-tax income, but to financial
planners it has meant more work for clients to develop strategies to
minimize both federal and state estate taxes, a less widely-publicized
section of the 114-page law.
Why? For starters, it
has changed the basic provisions of federal estate tax law, culminating
in their expiration in 2010, which planners have had to factor into
existing and new estate plans:
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A gradual increase in
the portions of estates’ values that are exempt from the federal
estate tax from $675,000 for those of people dying in 2001 to $3.5
million for those of people dying in 2009.
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A gradual reduction in
the maximum tax rate from 55 percent to 45 percent for estates of
people dying in 2007, 2008, and 2009.
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The uncertainty as to
whether such changes will be made permanent, be amended under some
future law, or be undone in the improbable, but not impossible,
absence of any new legislation applicable to 2011 and beyond.
At year-end 2005,
exemption from the federal tax rises from $1.5 million to $2.0 million
for estates of those dying in 2006 (and as its maximum rate falls from
47 percent to 46 percent). But consumers will also have to cope with the
continuing proliferation of changes at the state level resulting from
the act.
Why? Since 1926, states
have been able to piggyback on the federal estate tax, enacted in 1916,
by adopting state estate taxes for which they siphoned off a limited
share of the revenues collected from their deceased residents’ estates
in accordance with the federal tax’s provisions—without raising estates’
total tax bills. The limit: 16 percent of taxable estates’ values, equal
to the maximum for which estates could claim credit for state taxes on
their federal tax returns.
As adoption of the
“pick-up” tax spread, states came to rely more on it and less on other
wealth transfer or “death” taxes. In 1980, as noted by Daphne A. Kenyon
in State Tax Notes last May, 12 states relied exclusively on pick-up
taxes, 29 on a combination of inheritance and pick-up taxes, and eight
on free-standing estate and pick-up taxes. By 1998, the number relying
exclusively on pick-up taxes had jumped to 33, the number imposing both
inheritance and pick-up taxes had slumped to 13, and the number
collecting both free-standing estate and pick-up taxes had fallen to
four.
The 2001 act impacted
this pattern in three major ways:
It repealed the credit
for state estate taxes in 25 percent increments over a 4-year period
ending this year, raising revenue going to the Treasury and leaving
states—of which 37 relied on the pick-up tax exclusively by last
year—scrambling for a substitute source of funds. In the aggregate, all
forms of state wealth transfer taxes accounted for only 1.2 percent of
all state tax revenues in 2003, according to Kenyon.
It precipitated a flurry
of activity in state capitals to decide how to make up the lost revenue.
States without estate taxes were encouraged to adopt them. States with
estate taxes were encouraged to raise their rates and/or otherwise raise
more funds. The result: a varied pattern with differences in maximum
estate tax rates and exemptions among the states as well as between the
states and the federal government, even leading to cases of states
taxing estates whose values are too low to be taxed by the feds, now
that exemptions are higher. State governments have not been alone in
being engaged in a flurry of activity to deal with estate tax reform.
With the changes in state taxes and a decline in their uniformity,
financial planners have had to scurry to develop suitable estate plans
for clients in a wider range of circumstances, giving unprecedented
attention to state estate taxes.
It allowed estates to
deduct state estate taxes on federal estate tax returns, starting this
year.
With estate tax credits
and the pick-up tax becoming only a memory, will the same fate be in
store for other state wealth transfer taxes, relieving financial
planners from having to deal with them?
Kenyon seemed to think
so. “I expect over time the remaining states with wealth transfer taxes
will come under pressure to repeal them,” she wrote, “and unless the
federal estate tax and accompanying state credit is reenacted, I think
state wealth transfer taxes will eventually disappear.”
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January 2006 — This column is produced by the Financial Planning Association, the
membership organization for the financial planning community.