"Dynasty Trusts" Build Permanent Aristocracy in America

Dynasty trusts enable affluent people to provide their heirs w money & property largely free from taxes and immune to claims of creditors Heirs can behave as recklessly as they like knowing their $ forever protected for selves & kids = Aristocracy
 
Aug. 6, 2010 - PRLog -- In the US, the idea goes, a poor person can work hard, become rich and pass his money on to his children and grandchildren.

But then, if those descendants do not manage it wisely, they may lose it.

“Shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations,” the saying goes, and it conforms to our preference for meritocracy over aristocracy.

This assumption is now being undermined, however, through the increasing use of so-called dynasty trusts.

These estate-planning instruments enable affluent people to provide their heirs with money and property largely free from taxes and immune to the claims of creditors.

And rather than benefit only children and grandchildren, dynasty trusts provide for generations in perpetuity — truly creating an American aristocracy.

Congress should address this growing and pernicious problem of dynasty trusts.

This type of trust is new because until very recently most states had a “rule against perpetuities,”

which limited the term of any family trust to about 90 years, after which time the family members would own the property outright.

This rule derived from the idea that property is best controlled by the living.

In the mid-1990s, however, many states repealed the perpetuities rule,

and now any wealthy American can set property aside for his heirs forever,

simply by hiring a trustee from one of these states.

What caused state legislatures to abandon a rule that had existed since the late 1600s?

Banking industry lobbyists persuaded them that it would be a lucrative move because it would bring business to their states.

But it was Congress that set the stage nearly 25 years ago.

In 1986, at the height of Ronald Reagan's power and influence, Congress instituted the generation-skipping transfer tax.

This closed a loophole in the estate tax by ensuring that property would be subject to tax as it passed through each generation,

even if it would otherwise have avoided estate taxes because it was held in trust.

(It prevented “generation skipping.”)

However, in enacting this tax, Congress gave each taxpayer a $1 million exemption,

which was raised over the years to $3.5 million.

Naturally, estate planners began to create trusts that could take advantage of the exemption,

and avoid taxes for the term of the trust.

The term, however, was limited by the rule against perpetuities.

Bankers then realized that if they could persuade their state legislatures to repeal that rule, as well as state income taxes on trusts, they could attract business.

And in more than a dozen states the banking lobbyists were successful.

The rule against perpetuities was repealed, and dynasty trusts — tax-exempt trusts that could benefit generation after generation of heirs — were born.

Dynasty trusts can grow much larger than the $3.5 million exemption amount would suggest.

A couple can, for example, put $7 million (their two $3.5 million exemptions) into a life insurance policy owned by the trust.

They apply their exemption at the start, and the trust is forever free from taxes —

even when, after the death of the second spouse, the life insurance policy pays off at $100 million.

Alternatively ...

To read more at http://www.economywatch.com’, go to: http://www.economywatch.com/in-the-news/dynasty-trusts-bu...

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