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1 1 (November 17, 2017)

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Tax Reform: Estate and Gift Tax

The estate and gift tax is a unified tax, so that assets
transferred as gifts during a person's lifetime are combined
with those transferred at death (bequests) and subject to a
single rate schedule. The tax is imposed on the decedent's
estate, and the rate structure applies to total bequests and
gifts given; heirs are not subject to tax.


The exemption for 2017 is $5.49 million, and it is indexed
for inflation. Although the rates of the tax are graduated, the
exemption is applied in the form of a credit and offsets
taxes applied at the lower rates. Thus the taxable estate is
subject to a flat 40% rate.

Individuals are allowed to exempt annual gifts made in
2017 of $14,000 per recipient, which are not counted as part
of the lifetime exemption. The annual gift tax exemption is
indexed for inflation in $1,000 increments. A generation-
skipping tax is also imposed, to address estate tax
avoidance through gifts and bequests to a later generation.


Transfers between spouses are exempt. Estates are allowed
to take deductions for charitable contributions and
administrative expenses; to take a deduction for taxes paid
on estates and inheritances imposed by states; and to
exempt up to $5.49 million in remaining assets from the
tax.

A spouse can inherit any unused exemption. Thus, if a
husband dies and leaves an estate of $3 million, the
remainder of his $5.49 million exemption can be used by
his wife, whose exemption would be increased by the $2.49
million difference.



A series of provisions benefit small businesses, including
farms or landowners. These include the ability of family
businesses to pay any estate tax due in installments with
only interest payments during part of the installment period,
special use valuations, and conservation easements.
Minority discounts, although granted by courts rather than
specifically in the law, may also benefit small businesses.
Minority discounts are allowed when assets are left to a
family partnership in which no individual has a controlling
share and are thus deemed to be worth less than the current
market value for that reason.

Although the estate tax return is due within nine months of
death, small businesses are allowed to defer payment
(except for interest) for the next five years, and pay the
remaining installment payments over 10 years. Because the
last interest payment and the first installment coincide, the
overall delay in full payment is 14 years. The benefit is


                              Updated November 17, 2017



allowed only for the business portion of assets and only if
35% of the estate is in a farm or closely held business.

Small businesses are also allowed to value their assets at
use as a farm or business. This provision is particularly
beneficial to farms and allows a reduction in the estate
value of up to $1,120,000 in 2017. It means, for example,
that the value of the farm will be what it could be sold for if
restricted to farm use rather than, for example, to be
subdivided for development. Heirs are required to continue
use of the assets as a farm or business for 10 years.

Farmers and other landowners may also benefit from
conservation easements, a perpetual restriction on the use of
the land. In addition to the reduction in value due to the
easement itself, an exclusion of up to 40% of the restricted
value of the land, capped at $500,000, is allowed.


Heirs take as their basis (the amount to be deducted from
the sales price) for purposes of future capital gains the value
of the asset at the date of the decedent's death. This
treatment is referred to as step-up in basis and means that
no capital gains tax is paid on the appreciation of assets
during the decedent's lifetime. For example, if a decedent
purchased stock for $100,000 and the value of the stock at
the time of death were $200,000, if the heir sells the
property for $250,000 a gain of $50,000 is recognized and
the $100,000 of gain that accrued during the decedent's
lifetime is never taxed. The step-up rules do not apply to
gifts, in which carryover basis is applied. In that case, the
original basis of $100,000 would be carried over and the
gain would be $150,000.

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Aside from the different exemption levels and basis step-up
in some estate tax rules, there are other differences between
the taxation of gifts and bequests. The gift tax is tax
exclusive (i.e., the tax is imposed on the gift net of the tax),
whereas the estate tax is tax inclusive (i.e., the tax is applied
to the estate inclusive of the tax). To illustrate, consider a
50% tax rate. Assuming the exemption is already used, to
provide a gift with an after-tax value of $1 million the gift
giver would have to transfer $1.5 million: the tax rate of
50% is applied to the gift of $1 million for a $0.5 million
tax. To provide a net amount of $1 million for a bequest, $2
million is required: a tax of $1 million (50% of $2 million)
and a net to the heir of $1 million. Another way of stating
this is that the gift tax rate, if stated as a tax inclusive rate
like the estate tax, would be 33%. Thus for a 40% estate tax
rate, the gift tax rate equivalent is 28.6% (0.4/(1+0.4)).


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