Today
the Senate Finance Committee will hold a
hearing on the death tax entitled,
“Federal Estate Tax: Uncertainty in
Planning under Current Law.” Well, that
title certainly serves to both
understate the absurdity of current law
and the culpability of Congress
for causing that uncertainty.
Some history: Back in 2001, Congress
passed the first of what came to be
known as the Bush tax cuts. Among other
things, this bill “killed the death
tax,” albeit slowly, by December 31,
2010. Due to arcane Senate budget rules
that would have required 60 votes to
waive (then-minority leader Tom Daschle
was in no mood to accommodate this),
prior law reasserts itself one day
later, on New Years Day 2011.
In the case of the death tax, this
“prior law” reassertion is enough to
give you whiplash. Someone who dies in
December 2010 will pay no death tax at
all. Someone who dies just a month later
in January 2011 faces a death tax with a
top rate as high as 55 percent. Sammy
Hagar
may not be able to drive 55, but the
tax code sure as heck can.
Waiting in the wings is Warren Buffett.
At first blush, you might expect “the
Oracle of Omaha” to be a big proponent
of death-tax repeal. The CEO of
Berkshire Hathaway is the third-richest
person in the world (according to
Forbes magazine) and is worth about
$52 billion.
Yet Buffett is one of the biggest
proponents of the death tax. He’s
testifying before the Senate Finance
Committee today, where we will no doubt
hear of his concern for other people’s
accumulated wealth. But don’t be fooled.
Buffett advocates the death tax because
it has been so very good to him over the
years.
To fully understand the depth of
Buffett’s cynicism and self-interest,
let’s take a look at how one might avoid
paying the death tax. If you’re a
wealthy person and want to steer clear
of this tax, you have three options: Set
up complicated trust arrangements, which
mostly serve to enrich lawyers and
merely delay and shift a tax that must
eventually be paid; arrange for your
estate to make tax-deductible
contributions to charitable
organizations; or plow your wealth into
life insurance before you die. By law,
when your heirs are paid the
life-insurance disbursement, it’s
tax-free.
It doesn’t take a genius to see how
certain industries could make a tidy
profit off these death-tax escape
hatches. In fact, some of the most
ardent opponents of permanent death-tax
repeal are (surprise, surprise) estate
lawyers (who set up the trusts),
charities (who fear their spigots of
money turning off), and the
life-insurance lobby (which does all it
can to preserve its tax loopholes).
Buffett has major investments in
companies that sell life insurance.
The death tax has helped make him
rich while it has made other families
poor. What’s sad and ironic is that it
takes families with the resources of the
Buffetts (and the Hiltons and the
Kardashians) to set up the trusts and
life-insurance schemes that are
necessary to avoid paying the death tax.
And who ends up paying? Let’s say a
farmer has worked the fields all his
life and dies. He’s land-rich, thanks to
the exurb that popped up next door, and
his “estate” is worth several million
dollars. But his kids are given a tax
bill for a couple hundred grand. What
would you do? Like millions of others,
you’d sell the farm (and all the
memories) just to pay the tax bill.
All the while, the lawyers, charities,
and life-insurance salesmen leech off
the family farms and small businesses
that are faced with this situation.
Buffett is another of those leeches.
As the
American Family Business Institute’s
Dick Patten has
said:
The
“Oracle of Omaha’s” wealth has come
from making wise investments in
three different business activities.
First, he’s made substantial
investments in major corporations
that he believes will appreciate;
second, he operates a huge casualty
and life insurance business which
provides massive reserves of cheap
capital to support his other two
investing activities; and third, he
purchases family owned businesses at
fire sale prices. The last two
practices are directly dependent on
the death tax, and it’s unlikely
that Mr. Buffett would be the
world’s second richest man without
it.
Buffett
has a conflict of interest. If the death
tax goes away for good, so does much of
Buffett’s wealth. He’s doing everything
he can to make sure the death tax comes
back in full force. It’s wrong, and
somebody on the Senate Finance Committee
needs to grill him about it.
— Grover G. Norquist is President of
Americans for
Tax Reform
and author of the forthcoming book,
Leave Us Alone
(HarperCollins).