Today is tax day, and most good American doobies will have filed their taxes by midnight tonight. It takes the temperament of an accountant who’s passed the relevant CPA exam parts to self-prepare your taxes, and Wrongo has that temperament for less than 2 hours a day, so doing the Wrong family taxes never gets easier.
You might like âTax Rapâ by Go Remy. It was a submission to a Turbo Tax contest. While it didnât win, it is very funny:
For those who read The Wrongologist in email, you can find the song on YouTube here.
On Tax Day, we have to talk about the Estate Tax, or as the Republicans call it, the âDeath Taxâ. Why? Because House Republicans are going to repeal the Estate Tax this week. In their ham-handed way, they will link the two events to show Americans that Republicans are lowering taxes for the people.
But as Bloomberg points out, the Estate Tax is now paid by only 0.2% of US estates. That translates into about 5,500 households a year. The Hill reports that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that repeal of the Estate Tax would add $269 billion to the federal deficit from here to 2025.
The Republican logic for repeal is that the tax unfairly steals the family jewels from ordinary hard-working Americans, but the current estate tax doesnât kick in unless an individual has assets totaling more than $5.43 million. For married couples, the threshold for avoiding the tax is $10.86 million.
Not chump change.
Under the Republican plan, estates would pay no taxes. Furthermore, families would be able to pass assets across generations and avoid paying capital gains taxes on both real gains and so-called phantom income attributed to inflation, a loophole called âstepped up basisâ in the tax code. Subsequent heirs could continue this strategy so that the gain is effectively never taxed.
Here are a few quotes from Republican supporters of Estate Tax repeal:
Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.):
This tax doesnât just hit the big guy, it hits the little guy â like the small business and the family farm.
Rep. Kevin Brady (R-TX) made the âdouble taxationâ argument:
The death tax is the wrong tax at the wrong time, and it hurts the wrong people…They are double and triple taxed.
Sen. John Thune (R-SD):
The death tax imposes a tax rate as high as 40 % on family farms, ranches and small businesses, which hurts economic growth by discouraging savings and development.
But, the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center estimates that only 120 farms and small business, where at least half the assets are in farm or business assets, had to pay the estate tax in 2013. And double-taxation shouldnât be so hard for Republicans to understand. No one claims that when a worker gets paid a wage, and pays a tax on that income, and who later spends some of that after-tax income paying someone to mow their lawn, that it is double-taxation for the lawn guy to pay income tax. This is really simple: Money moves from entity, to entity, to entity, and each time, tax applies.
So, the facts donât support the case against the estate tax, but this does not matter to Republicans.
It has become an ideological issue, even if the data show that that relatively few small farms or businesses appear to be affected. Even if itâs only a handful, thatâs apparently too many for Republicans.
The truth is that repealing the Estate Tax would mainly benefit the very wealthiest Americans. In 2016, the wealthiest 1,300 or so estates (those worth $20 million or more) would receive 73% of the benefit, with each receiving a tax windfall averaging roughly $10 million, according to the Joint Committee on Taxationâs analysis of the repeal proposal approved by the Ways and Means Committee.
This is a special kind of welfare. It is welfare for the rich. This will give multimillionaires, who are the only people we are talking about, an additional 40% of wealth transfer upon the death of a parent. This undresses Republicans as planning to create a permanent aristocracy based on inherited wealth.
And Republicans say they will address income inequality if only America votes for them in 2016?
The GOP proves again that they are not what they claim. They claim to be for balancing the budget and decreasing the deficit, but leap at the chance to lavish more $ billions on the rich, while increasing the deficit.
The facts mean nothing to President Nordquist, or to our right-wing friends when discussing taxes.
Happy Tax Day!
Â
As someone who underwrites life policies sold for estate planning and business continuity, I can tell you that almost no farms are closed b/c of estate taxes. If a sole proprietor or partner farmer dies, the first obligation is to the crop loan. So the farmer’s heirs need to pay this, even sell the farm. In fact, most farmers who die have long since passed their land to heirs, or sold out entirely.
Small businesses have the identical problem, except that their loan is the line of credit. Even for incorporated businesses, relatively few have credit via the business, most credit is personal dept.
Some estimates suggest as few as a dozen farms are closed to pay estate taxes.