2001 Tax Act. In 2001
What Happened in 2009?
Planning in Chaos.
2010 Changes. The U.S. has an unpredictable planning environment in which any number of radically different changes may occur in 2010:
2011 Changes.
Higher Taxes.
ROTH IRAs.
As you may have heard, the federal estate tax rules changed radically in 2010, and could change radically again in 2011 unless Congress passes new legislation. This report is intended to advise you of what has happened and encourage you to reevaluate your estate plan as soon as possible.
Congress passed the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA) which provided for significant phased-in increases in the federal estate, gift and generation skipping tax (GST) exemptions and lower tax rates.
EGTRRA provisions included:
Estate planning practitioners almost universally expected Congress to carry the 2009 estate tax rules across 2010 (both Representative Rangel as Chair of the House Ways and Means and Senator Baucus as Chair of the Senate Finance Committee said it would happen earlier last fall). However, unexpectedly in December the House failed to act on a one year extension and instead sent the Senate a bill to make the 2009 rules permanent. Because the Senate was focused on health care and there was broad disagreement in the Senate on what to do with estate taxes, Congress enacted no changes to EGTRRA's 2010 rules. Thus, effective as of January 1, 2010, there is no federal estate or GST tax.
Congress's failure to adopt estate tax legislation in 2009 and the possibility that changes will not be adopted during 2010, radically change the estate planning considerations of many clients. For example, Congress has indicated that in 2010 about 6,000 decedents will benefit from the elimination of estate taxes, but over 70,000 heirs will pay higher income taxes because of the change in the income tax basis rules for assets received from decedents.
Congress may do nothing in 2010, in which case there is an adjusted carryover basis, and no federal estate or GST tax for people who die in 2010. While you probably will not die in 2010, you still need to consider planning for that possibility, because not planning for these changes, if death occurs, can be disastrous. For example:
Formula clauses (e.g. terms that allocated your estate exemption to a "by-pass trust") in your planning documents could inadvertently disinherit some heirs and/or your surviving spouse and/or create conflicts among family members on how your documents should be properly interpreted.
Unless Congress enacts new legislation in 2010, then on January 1, 2011, a number of automatic changes occur to the federal tax code, including:
No matter what happens to the estate tax, substantial tax increases are looming. A $12 trillion deficit is projected for the next decade. The Congressional Budget Office indicates that the social security trust fund will pay out more then it receives starting in 2011 or 2012. Taxes will have to increase across a broad range of Americans. Both the Washington Post and the New York Times have stated that the President will have to abandon his pledge to only increase taxes on taxpayers earning over $250,000. Given slow economic recovery and the fact that we are in a mid-term election year, the federal government will probably not increase taxes until sometime in 2011. While substantial tax increases are likely, we just don't know any details.
In 2010, taxpayers can convert traditional IRAs to ROTH IRAs and can pay the income taxes due on such conversion in 2010 or equally in 2011 and 2012. There are significant benefits and traps for the unwary in making these decisions.
Effectively, unless Congress adopts new legislation, in 2010 the estate tax rules rotate 180 degrees from where they were in 2009, and then rotate 180 degrees again in 2011 – only the estate tax and income tax rules could be even worse than what we had in 2009. Uncertainty makes it difficult to plan, but waiting to see what happens next is not a good idea. The earlier you can implement flexible tax and estate planning to respond to these changes the better.
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