Have you had to eliminate jobs, sell a business or assets to pay or plan for the death tax?

Make the difference! Help Repeal the Estate Tax.

Investment Solicitations Policy

Since we receive numerous requests every day to consider investing for our clients, we have developed a submission policy that is outlined below.

Send a brief write up of the investment opportunity with any significant material to our office for review with an indication on the envelope that it is an investment solicitation. If upon review we determine that we would like to meet to discuss or get further information, we will contact you by email or phone. Do not send blind emails or call, as it is impossible for us to respond to all requests. If you are going to be in our area and you would like an opportunity to meet us in person, please send an email with a “REQUEST TO MEET” in the subject line and we will respond if we are interested and available to meet.

 

Listen to what the public is saying about estate taxes.

House Passes Permanence Instead of One-Year Freeze

Dear Supporters:

Over the last three months, we have worked strategically to move House leaders away from legislative proposals that would merely extend the current estate tax for one year or eliminate important valuation discount planning techniques. We are thus pleased to report that the House today passed an estate tax reform bill that provides certainty and permanency without increasing the estate tax burden on families. The House passed the clean, permanent freeze (H.R. 4154) by a vote of 225-200. The vote followed the failure of a motion to recommit 187-233, a procedural motion that sought to repeal the estate tax in 2010 and 2011.

Predictably, progressives assailed the bill as a tax cut for wealthy families while they were being asked to expend increased resources for a troop surge in Afghanistan. Meanwhile, Republicans said the bill didn't go far enough.

While the Family Business Estate Tax Coalition has continued to speak with one voice in support of the Lincoln/Kyl and Berkley/Brady reform proposals and on the need for estate tax reform that provides certainty, permanency and relief, individual organizations have taken varying positions with respect to H.R. 4154. The National Federation of Independent Business and the National Farm Bureau remained neutral, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce supported it, and the National Association for Manufacturers was opposed. As you know, we did not have a large public role, but instead worked quietly to minimize the risk for our families by undermining the one-year freeze and threat to valuation discounts and established planning techniques.

This is the critically important first step in what is likely to be quick process over the next few weeks. Now attention moves to the Senate, where Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT), a proponent of ultimate repeal, and Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-ND) insisted the chamber must act by the end of the year and indicated they would like to pass a permanent freeze that would also index the exemption for inflation. Senators Tom Carper (D-DE) and George Voinovich (R-OH) recently introduced S. 2784 as a stand-alone measure to enact such reform. Policy and Taxation Group has long advocated that any exemption relief should be accompanied by substantial rate relief and that acceptable estate tax reform must not increase the burden on families.

Senators Lincoln and Kyl are plotting their strategy to seek increased estate tax relief with hopes that a better deal for families could be worked out in conference. They may phase in their proposal like Berkley/Brady, which would cut the $87 billion cost roughly in half and reduce the risk of harmful offsets. We continue to argue that estate tax reform must not be offset by increases in the burden on families, and particularly not those that would result from changes to valuation rules or GRATs.

Passage of permanent reform increases the chances that we can avoid a one-year freeze and return to 55% rate in 2011, but we are not out of the woods yet. With potentially differing positions in the House and Senate combined with a short time window, a one-year freeze could still result as a fall-back option.

Despite the complex legislative and political dynamics, Policy and Taxation Group is working effectively and pragmatically behind the scenes every step of the way, from the successful identification of sponsors and drafting of the Berkley/Brady proposal to the persuasion of House leaders to pass permanence without harmful offsets. Our work continues to make a critically important difference and increase the prospects for real, sustainable relief.

We'll keep you posted as the Senate prepares for action. Thanks for your continuing support.

Best,

Jeff

   
 

[Home Page] [Eliminate Tax] [Horror Stories] [National Polls] [Status of Legislation] [Take Action] [Publications] [F.A.Q.] [About Us] [Related Sites]

© 2006 by Policy and Taxation Group
A California Corporation
site map
designed and maintained by nelsonecom