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185 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2005)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0182 and id is 1 raw text is: INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH ON THE ECONOMICS OF TAXATION
IRET is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing
the public about policies thait will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

April 11, 2005

Advisory No. 185

ESTATE TAX REPEAL CONSIDERED BY HOUSE

The House of Representatives is in the process
of considering a permanent repeal of the estate tax.
The estate tax (but not the gift tax) is scheduled to
expire in 2010, but would re-emerge in 2011 without
Congressional action.
There are five issues that merit attention as the
debate proceeds: treatment of capital gains, revenue
scoring, the gift tax, timing, and economic impact.
Background
The  Economic   Growth   and  Tax  Relief
Reconciliation Act of 2001 raised the unified credit
and reduced tax rates through 2009, and repealed the
estate tax (but not the gift tax)
for 2010. For 2010, the Act
replaces the step-up in basis at   we have con
death with an exempt amount   that the estato
of $1.3 million for capital gains  unfair  and
taken by beneficiaries, plus an  then let us en
additional $3 million exemption
for capital gains taken by a
spouse. Any gains above those
amounts require the carry-over of the decedent's
original cost basis. The exempt amounts would
protect about as much of the estate as is now
rendered tax exempt by the unified credit, but would
subject assets received from larger estates to a
capital gains tax.
The bills
The House will vote on H.R. 8 this week.
H.R. 8 would repeal the estate and generation
skipping tax permanently as of 2010, continuing the

2001 Act's substitution of exempt amounts on capital
gains for the step-up at death. The gift tax would
remain. H.R. 8 is a vast improvement over current
law, and should be adopted.
An alternative approach, H.R. 64, has been
offered by Representative Cox. H.R. 64 would
repeal the estate, generation skipping, and gift taxes
effective January 1, 2005. H.R. 64 would give a
better tax result and better timing, but is not the bill
being considered.
The Senate may take up the issue later. In the
Senate, S. 420 resembles H.R. 8. Senator Sessions

plans to introduce

~ie to the realization
tax is inherently

I

counterproduetve,
the tax at once.

not in a pension

a bill to make the same changes
as S. 420, but move the
effective date to 2005. The
sooner, the better.
Treatment of capital gains
Under pre-2001 law, and
through 2009, the tax basis of
an ordinary inherited asset (one
arrangement) is stepped up to

current market value at the death of the owner.
Capital gains accrued by the decedent are forgiven.
The decedent's original tax basis (acquisition cost) of
the transferred asset is not carried over to the
beneficiary. By contrast, proceeds from assets in
qualified pension plans and regular IRAs, which
were originally tax deferred, are taxed at ordinary tax
rates when the beneficiaries withdraw funds from the
plans. In effect, they have carry-over basis (zero for
pensions and traditional deductible IRAs; the amount
of original contributions to non-deductible IRAs).

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