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Michael Sean WintersDecember 04, 2009

The U.S. House of Representatives yesterday passed a reinstatement of the current estate tax rates. The tax only affects estates values at more than $3.5 million per person ($7 million for a couple) and is set at the rate of 45 percent. The estate tax was slated to expire next year, and then in 2011 return to the 2001 rates, which only excluded estates valued at $1 million and taxed the others at a 55 percent rate.

Obviously, the current arrangement needed to be changed or we would have a whole lot of nervous rich grandmothers next year. And it is a shame that the House did not go back to the earlier, higher rate although it was correct to raise the exclusion limit. As is, the federal treasury will forego $234 billion in revenue over the next ten years by adopting the lower, current rate. That figure represents one-quarter of the cost of the health care reform over that same decade.

The estate tax has been unhappily, but effectively, dubbed the "death tax" by Republicans. The GOP pulled off a similarly effective, and misleading, label for the public option in the health care debate, calling it "government-run health care." The Democrats are simply not as good as their counterparts at finding catchy ways to describe their legislative proposals. We have cited previously an instance of this in the health care debate. If the public option had been structured as a buy-in to the health plan offered to federal employees, Democrats could sell it with the mantra "You should be able to get the same health care your congressman gets."

Here is another suggestion. As the new year ends, and Wall Street firms, recently bailed out by Main Street taxpayers, plan their lavish bonuses, the Democrats should propose a surtax on the income of financial firms. The revenue would go into an insurance fund that would function like FDIC does for banks. In the future, if a Wall Street firm is heading towards bankruptcy, the fund could be used to provide future bailouts instead of turning to the taxpayers again. The tag line: "Because Wall Street can’t fool Main Street twice." The added level of insurance would provide stability to the entire system and, politically, it would take some of the sting off the fact that Wall Street is recovering quickly from last year’s meltdown while Main Street is still struggling with 10 percent unemployment.

The estate tax, let’s call it the level playing field tax, represents a core American value. In America, it should matter more who you are than who your grandparents were. There are libertarian objections to an estate tax, of course, but in the Catholic social tradition, goods, even private goods, are always held in public trust. The estate tax reminds us of this core principle of our tradition. Yes, America is still the land of Horatio Alger mythology, but there is nothing in that myth about Horatio’s grandchildren.

I invite our friends at The New Yorker to re-run one of my all-time favorite political cartoons. It ran in 1964 and it showed then-presidential candidate and Sen. Barry Goldwater walking past a hobo, as homeless people were then called. The Senator, known for embodying the rugged individualism of the West (but living in Phoenix, a city only made possible because of federal water projects), looks at the man and mutters, "If he had any gumption, he would inherit a department store chain like the rest of us." As the GOP tries to make hay with the estate tax, it is good to be reminded that most wealth in America is inherited wealth and that the merits do not always follow the money from one generation to the next.

 

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James Lindsay
14 years 11 months ago
This action may have simply been symbolism, since the Senate does not seem to have time to pass it and for it to go to Conference by January 1. This reform should probably be part of a comprehensive tax reform package, which is currently being considered.

There are many who believe that the focus should no longer be estates, but instead payouts to heirs and that such payouts should be considered normal income when received.

If this is part of a tax reform where the floor for actually filing income taxes is raised to $50,000 for individuals/$100,000 for families (or more), most small inheritors will not be unduly touched by this and if an asset is kept productive rather than liquidated, there would be no tax.

More will be revealed.
rita patterson
14 years 11 months ago
Let me see if I understand. A person pays state and income tax their entire life and upon death you believe the government—federal and state-is entitled to 45-65% of a person’s life savings, why? My guess would be you choose to spend every dime you make rather than save in order to hand on the fruits of labor to your heirs. Not only is this an immoral act in and of itself (stealing) one has no input in how the stolen money is spent. Much of the money will fund immoral purposes—i.e. abortion, birth control, etc.
Jeffrey Miller
14 years 11 months ago
So please explain to me in terms of Catholic teaching while taxing once again what had been taxed before and robbing any relatives of that value?
So that the government can have more money to waste?
Brian Gallagher
14 years 11 months ago
GOP Pollster Frank Lutz was the one we can "thank" for calling the inheritance tax a "death tax".  God made us all equal, but economic inequality is political inequality (ever try to run for high office without wealthy donors? No, I didn't think so.) 
You know, I say we embrace the spin that labels the inheritance tax a "death tax".  Dying peacefully at home surrounded by friends and family?  That's gonna cost you.  However, a darkly comic demise will kick you down into a lower bracket!
The right-wing promotes the very non-Catholic idea that someone can own something absolutely.  They think distributive justice was dreamed up by Lenin.  I suggest they check out Question 61 of Thomas's Summa.
Pharoh, the Heaven's Gate cult, and the anti-Death Taxers need to learn one thing:  you can't take it with you!

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