Michigan Attorneys Providing Excellence in Estate Planning and Elder Care

More Estate Tax Uncertainty

The Estate Tax laws will change, it is just a question of when. My best-educated guess is that the politicians will put this off, either as suggested below or by extending the current law.  They will then address this after the mid-term elections next November.  (At what point is it fair to say that the government is creating a time crunch crisis, just so that any proposed law must be passed without time to read it or debate it).

Meanwhile, those who wisely plan ahead are left to guess what the estate tax law will be for the foreseeable future.

Below are excerpts from the Will, Trusts & Estates Prof Blog, which can be read here:

Congress could extend the 2009 estate tax system into 2010 rather than allowing the estate tax to lapse. But, the estate tax exemption is set to return to $1 million in 2011, which means that extending the current $3.5 million exemption rate beyond 2010 would be counted as a http://bit.ly/1KAK1irevenue loser.

Alternatively, Congress could allow the estate tax to expire as planned.  Laura Saunders, in Will the Estate Tax Disappear?, WSJ, Oct. 23, 2009, writes the following regarding this option:

At issue is the “step-up in cost basis” that all assets receive when an owner dies. The way the law is currently written, if the estate tax goes away, so does the step-up in cost basis . . . .

If Congress fails to extend the current system for 2010, then at the owner’s death all assets would retain their original cost, called “carry-over basis.” . . .

To be sure, the 2010 law as written gives each taxpayer $1.3 million worth of “free” step-up at death, but this is a far cry from the unlimited basis step-up under current law. Married couples get an additional $3 million at the death of the first spouse, heavily favoring them over individuals.

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