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1939

(1,683 posts)
47. From the IRS site
Thu May 5, 2016, 05:42 PM
May 2016

"Estate Tax

"The Estate Tax is a tax on your right to transfer property at your death. It consists of an accounting of everything you own or have certain interests in at the date of death (Refer to Form 706 (PDF)). The fair market value of these items is used, not necessarily what you paid for them or what their values were when you acquired them. The total of all of these items is your "Gross Estate." The includible property may consist of cash and securities, real estate, insurance, trusts, annuities, business interests and other assets.

"Once you have accounted for the Gross Estate, certain deductions (and in special circumstances, reductions to value) are allowed in arriving at your "Taxable Estate." These deductions may include mortgages and other debts, estate administration expenses, property that passes to surviving spouses and qualified charities. The value of some operating business interests or farms may be reduced for estates that qualify.

"After the net amount is computed, the value of lifetime taxable gifts (beginning with gifts made in 1977) is added to this number and the tax is computed. The tax is then reduced by the available unified credit.

"Most relatively simple estates (cash, publicly traded securities, small amounts of other easily valued assets, and no special deductions or elections, or jointly held property) do not require the filing of an estate tax return. A filing is required for estates with combined gross assets and prior taxable gifts exceeding $1,500,000 in 2004 - 2005; $2,000,000 in 2006 - 2008; $3,500,000 for decedents dying in 2009; and $5,000,000 or more for decedent's dying in 2010 and 2011 (note: there are special rules for decedents dying in 2010); $5,120,000 in 2012, $5,250,000 in 2013, $5,340,000 in 2014, $5,430,000 in 2015, and $5,450,000 in 2016.

"Beginning January 1, 2011, estates of decedents survived by a spouse may elect to pass any of the decedent’s unused exemption to the surviving spouse. This election is made on a timely filed estate tax return for the decedent with a surviving spouse. Note that simplified valuation provisions apply for those estates without a filing requirement absent the portability election.

"For additional information, refer to Instructions for Form 706."

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

My wife and I are in the process of transferring... meaculpa2011 May 2016 #1
Because you will already have given them everything before you die? Baobab May 2016 #2
Universal Basic Income for all... meaculpa2011 May 2016 #6
I hate work and I'm 35. FML for the next 25-35 years MillennialDem May 2016 #10
I read The Culture books too. It's not right around the corner, sorry. nt IamMab May 2016 #3
Sorry, never heard of said books, its just fairly well known fact in the scientific community Baobab May 2016 #17
I think you mean "science fiction community." nt IamMab May 2016 #21
I don't know... JSup May 2016 #4
People could leave their children up to around $10 million in today's money Baobab May 2016 #5
Reward people for economic activity 1939 May 2016 #9
People would need a way to bypass that because they will not have practically any income Baobab May 2016 #22
mental labor will be done by machines too, much better than most people do because AIs Baobab May 2016 #23
Sometimes I read too fast... JSup May 2016 #14
It's more xianism than evolution... scscholar May 2016 #29
So the Sultan of Turkey living large 1500-1900 1939 May 2016 #31
Oh, he meant 'Christian'! JSup May 2016 #49
Naw 1939 May 2016 #50
With the 't'... JSup May 2016 #56
So long as there is poverty, all taxes should be steeply progressive. hunter May 2016 #7
UBI fixes most of these things MillennialDem May 2016 #11
Except for the "non-abusive workplace" 1939 May 2016 #24
thats the idea, by doing this, since everybody dies, there would no longer be poverty Baobab May 2016 #41
No. Income taxes have to be progressive. trotsky May 2016 #8
I would be ok with a flat tax IF capital gains were treated identically to income and there was MillennialDem May 2016 #12
I guarantee you, the rich would still come out ahead... trotsky May 2016 #13
Most flat tax analysis only looks at income (as opposed to capital gains and payroll). Now, I know MillennialDem May 2016 #15
There would likely be no middle class because all the middle class type jobs would be automated Baobab May 2016 #19
And if you could ponly pass $10 million down to your kids 1939 May 2016 #28
$10 million is way more than enough to live on the dividends. Even $1 million is close (for MillennialDem May 2016 #36
$30,000 (yr) isnt enough to live safely in America today, let alone in the future. Baobab May 2016 #20
$30,000 is def enough to live on, not safely... but it is the median individual income. And you coul MillennialDem May 2016 #37
"side work" wont be available in this hypothetical future- also >90% of mainstream jobs will vanish Baobab May 2016 #45
Tax on wealth upon death would be 100% - $10M for each child. Baobab May 2016 #18
Sounds kind of hellish to me. NT Adrahil May 2016 #54
They will be very much so, as the richer people are, the higher percentage of that tax. Baobab May 2016 #26
Say goodbye to the home mortgage deduction. trotsky May 2016 #35
They would not be taxed at all. Nor would many have jobs. Baobab May 2016 #38
That would help fix the debt practially overnight meow2u3 May 2016 #48
Interesting idea TrappedInUtah May 2016 #16
We couldnt "maintain a society with good jobs and wages" for everybody because most people will Baobab May 2016 #32
Inheritence tax should be minimal or non existent... TipTok May 2016 #25
This. B2G May 2016 #27
No, only the profit is taxed IphengeniaBlumgarten May 2016 #34
As it is now (current law) 1939 May 2016 #30
You only do that because the government is so corrupt now. Baobab May 2016 #33
Send me all your money 1939 May 2016 #42
$3.7M (just went through probate) not $5M REP May 2016 #46
From the IRS site 1939 May 2016 #47
Wonder what my lawyer was smoking REP May 2016 #55
unless those businesses were worh more than the number of children times $10M they would be passed Baobab May 2016 #39
Too many people?  Not enough resources? Not enough jobs? tularetom May 2016 #40
People arent "born to" spend most of their time making somebody else rich Baobab May 2016 #43
No, but it's the right idea MosheFeingold May 2016 #44
It wouldn't raise enough money 1939 May 2016 #51
Never ran the numbers, so I don't know MosheFeingold May 2016 #57
Pure Fantasy MichMan May 2016 #52
which jobs cannot be automated apart from the obvious ones? Baobab May 2016 #53
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