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14 Colum. J. Tax L. 1 (2023)

handle is hein.journals/colujoutl14 and id is 1 raw text is: 




   DONOR-ADVISED FUNDS IN THE WAKE OF THE TAX CUTS AND
                                 JOBS  ACT


                               David I. Walker*


                                   Abstract

       Donor-advised  funds  (DAFs)  are  conduits for charitable giving that
support  immediate  tax deductions  while creating  a reservoir of assets for
subsequent  disposition to end-use charities. The number of new DAF  accounts
has  skyrocketed in the wake of the 2017 Tax Cuts and  Jobs Act (TCJA).  This
Article presents evidence suggesting that bunching charitable contributions to
more  fully exploit the TCJA-enhanced standard deduction likely motivates much
of the onslaught of new DAF accounts established since 2016 and argues that the
typical buncher is likely to differ from other DAF account holders in ways that
matter from a policy perspective. Thus, while DAF critics have generally focused
on the unproductive accumulation of assets in DAF accounts and have advanced
reforms aimed  at speeding up DAF payouts, this Article argues that in the context
of bunchers, unproductive accumulation of assets in DAF accounts is unlikely to
be a major problem. The more  significant problem with DAF-facilitated bunching
is that the cost to the public fisc is unlikely to be justified by incremental
charitable giving. Thus, while this Article concludes that regulation targeting
DAF  payouts  is unobjectionable, it argues that a wholly different set of reforms
targeting the deductibility of charitable giving generally would be needed to
address  the cost of DAF-facilitated bunching  under  current law  and  under
thoughtfully reformed laws  involving universal charitable deductions above a
floor.
















       * Professor of Law and Maurice Poch Faculty Research Scholar, Boston University
School of Law. The author thanks John Brooks, Steven Dean, Alan Feld, Gregg Polsky, and Ted
Sims for their valuable comments and suggestions and Stephen Fleury for excellent research
assistance.

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