{"id":1580,"date":"2009-05-12T15:52:00","date_gmt":"2009-05-12T19:52:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/actec.matrixdev.net\/?post_type=capital-letter&p=1580"},"modified":"2024-04-17T17:14:41","modified_gmt":"2024-04-17T21:14:41","slug":"the-obama-administrations-revenue-proposals","status":"publish","type":"capital-letter","link":"https:\/\/actec.matrixdev.net\/capital-letter\/the-obama-administrations-revenue-proposals\/","title":{"rendered":"The Obama Administration\u2019s Revenue Proposals"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Administration\u2019s revenue raisers would require consistency in determining basis, limit valuation discounts, and impose a minimum ten-year term on GRATs.<\/strong><\/em> Dear Readers Who Follow Washington Developments:<\/p>\n\n\n\n The Treasury Department\u2019s \u201cGeneral Explanations of the Administration\u2019s Fiscal Year 2010 Revenue Proposals<\/a>\u201d (popularly called the \u201cGreenbook<\/a>\u201d) was released on May 11, 2009. The Appendix<\/a>, on page 125, confirms that \u201c[e]state and gift taxes are assumed to be extended at parameters in effect for calendar year 2009 (a top rate of 45 percent and an exemption amount of $3.5 million).\u201d At pages 119-23, as revenue raisers dedicated to health care reform, three revenue-raising proposals are described under the heading \u201cModify Estate and Gift Tax Valuation Discounts and Make Other Reforms<\/a>.\u201d (A fourth proposal under that heading addresses the tax treatment of alternative fuels<\/a>.)\u201cRequire Consistency in Value for Transfer and Income Tax Purposes\u201d<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n Invoking the relatively noncontroversial principle of consistency, this proposal would require the income tax basis of property received from a decedent or donor to be equal to the estate tax value or the donor\u2019s basis. The Greenbook<\/a> recalls that sections 2701-2704 were enacted to curb techniques designed to reduce transfer tax value but not the economic benefit to the recipients. After reciting the history of section 2702 and the use of GRATs, the Greenbook<\/a> notes that \u201c[t]axpayers have become more adept at maximizing the benefit of this technique, often by minimizing the term of the GRAT (thus reducing the risk of the grantor\u2019s death during the term), in many cases to 2 years, and by retaining annuity interests significant enough to reduce the gift tax value of the remainder interest to zero or to a number small enough to generate only a minimal gift tax liability.\u201d The proposals, of course, have to be reduced to statutory language (if they are not already) and considered by Congress. Ronald D. Aucutt \u00a0 \u00a9 2009 by Ronald D. Aucutt. All rights reserved<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Administration\u2019s revenue raisers would require consistency in determining basis, limit valuation discounts, and impose a minimum ten-year term on GRATs.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_tec_requires_first_save":true,"_EventAllDay":false,"_EventTimezone":"","_EventStartDate":"","_EventEndDate":"","_EventStartDateUTC":"","_EventEndDateUTC":"","_EventShowMap":false,"_EventShowMapLink":false,"_EventURL":"","_EventCost":"","_EventCostDescription":"","_EventCurrencySymbol":"","_EventCurrencyCode":"","_EventCurrencyPosition":"","_EventDateTimeSeparator":"","_EventTimeRangeSeparator":"","_EventOrganizerID":[],"_EventVenueID":[],"_OrganizerEmail":"","_OrganizerPhone":"","_OrganizerWebsite":"","_VenueAddress":"","_VenueCity":"","_VenueCountry":"","_VenueProvince":"","_VenueState":"","_VenueZip":"","_VenuePhone":"","_VenueURL":"","_VenueStateProvince":"","_VenueLat":"","_VenueLng":"","_VenueShowMap":false,"_VenueShowMapLink":false,"_tribe_blocks_recurrence_rules":"","_tribe_blocks_recurrence_description":"","_tribe_blocks_recurrence_exclusions":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"class_list":["post-1580","capital-letter","type-capital-letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
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In a possibly unintended change from current substantive law, the proposal would apparently require the basis of even property acquired by gift to be no greater than the gift tax value. Under section 1015(a)<\/a>, the basis for determining the donee\u2019s gain can be greater than the gift tax value if that was the donor\u2019s basis.
The executor or donor would be required to report the necessary information to both the recipient and the Internal Revenue Service. Regulations could extend this reporting requirement to annual exclusion gifts and estates for which no estate tax return is required. Regulations could also provide relief for the surviving joint tenant or other recipient who has better information than the executor.
The proposal would be effective as of the date of enactment and is estimated to raise tax revenue by $1.87 billion over ten years. Interestingly, a similar proposal floated by the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation in 2005 was estimated to raise less than $50 million over ten years.\u201cModify Rules on Valuation Discounts\u201d<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n
Specifically, the Greenbook<\/a> points out that section 2704(b)<\/a> provides that certain \u201capplicable restrictions\u201d that would otherwise justify valuation discounts are ignored in intra-family transfers of interests in family-controlled entities, but adds that \u201c[j]udicial decisions and the enactment of new statutes in most states have, in effect, made section 2704(b)<\/a> inapplicable in many situations.\u201d The Greenbook<\/a> also states that \u201cthe Internal Revenue Service has identified additional arrangements designed to circumvent the application of section 2704<\/a>.\u201d This identification may have occurred during work on the pending regulations project under section 2704(b)(4)<\/a>, which authorizes Treasury regulations providing \u201cthat other restrictions shall be disregarded in determining the value of the transfer of any interest in a corporation or partnership to a member of the transferor\u2019s family if such restriction has the effect of reducing the value of the transferred interest for purposes of this subtitle but does not ultimately reduce the value of such interest to the transferee.\u201d Indeed, because the section 2704(b)(4)<\/a> regulation project has been authorized by statute since 1990 and has been on the Treasury-IRS Priority Guidance Plan since 2003, it is entirely possible that an important purpose for the current legislative proposal is to obtain congressional clarification and direction that will assist in the completion of that project.
Using section 2704(b)<\/a> as a framework, the proposal would create a more durable category of \u201cdisregarded restrictions.\u201d Disregarded restrictions would \u201cinclude\u201d restrictions on liquidation of an interest that are measured against standards prescribed in Treasury regulations, not against default state law. Thus, no change in state law would affect the reach of the statute. In addition, the Greenbook<\/a> is careful to cast its references in terms of all \u201centities,\u201d not just corporations or partnerships.
Although the Greenbook<\/a> does not say so, it is possible that that the \u201cdisregarded restrictions\u201d in view, which \u201cinclude\u201d certain limitations on liquidation (the current scope of section 2704(b)(2)(A)<\/a>), may also include other restrictions, such as restrictions on management, distributions, access to information, and transferability. If so, this proposal might call for reconsideration of the famous disclaimer in the 1990 conference report that \u201c[t]hese rules do not affect minority discounts or other discounts available under [former] law.\u201d H.R. Rep. No. 101-964, 101st Cong., 2d Sess. 1137 (1990).
Disregarded restrictions would also include limitations on a transferee\u2019s ability to be admitted as a full partner or other holder of an equity interest, thus apparently overriding any disposition to value a transferred interest as an \u201cassignee\u201d interest. Treasury would be empowered by regulations to ignore the ownership of certain interests by charities, treating those interests as held by the family.
The Greenbook<\/a> includes a couple reassuring references. For example, under the proposal, regulations could \u201ccreate safe harbors to permit taxpayers to draft the governing documents of a family-controlled entity so as to avoid the application of section 2704<\/a> if certain standards are met.\u201d While no details are given, this authority could be used to protect actual family operating businesses and to protect the holder of a restricted noncontrolling interest received from others (including ancestors) if that holder did not create those restrictions and never had a meaningful opportunity to remove those restrictions.
In addition, the Greenbook<\/a> promises to \u201cmake conforming clarifications with regard to the interaction of this proposal with the transfer tax marital and charitable deductions.\u201d This could override the harsh \u201creverse-Chenoweth<\/em>\u201d result seen in Technical Advice Memoranda 9050004 (Aug. 31, 1990) and 9403005 (Oct. 14, 1993) (all stock owned by the decedent valued as a control block for purposes of the gross estate, but the marital bequest valued separately for purposes of the marital deduction), relying on Estate of Chenoweth v. Commissioner<\/em>, 88 T.C. 1577 (1987) (estate of a decedent who owned all the stock of a corporation entitled to prove a control premium for a 51-percent block of stock bequeathed to the surviving spouse for purposes of the marital deduction), and Ahmanson Foundation v. United States<\/em>, 674 F.2d 761 (9th Cir. 1981). Such a result would reinforce the overall fairness of the proposal and would be very welcome.
The proposal would apply to transfers \u2013 gifts and deaths \u2013 after the date of enactment. Consistent with section 2704<\/a> itself, the proposal would not apply to restrictions created on or before October 8, 1990.
The proposal is estimated to raise revenue by $19.038 billion over the ten fiscal years from 2010 through 2019. The estimate of $667 million of additional revenue for fiscal 2010, which ends September 30, 2010, necessarily assumes that enactment will occur early enough to catch a substantial number of transfers in calendar 2009. But the drafters of the Greenbook<\/a> would probably deny that they can predict with that level of precision when Congress might act.\u201cRequire Minimum Term for Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts (GRATs)\u201d<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n
While rumors have occasionally been heard of congressional<\/em> plans to limit the attractiveness of GRATs by imposing a minimum gift tax value for the remainder (such as 10%), the Greenbook<\/a> instead proposes to increase the mortality risk of GRATs by requiring a minimum ten-year term. A footnote quixotically compares the ten-year term to the minimum ten-year term of \u201cClifford<\/em> trusts\u201d under section 673 (before its amendment by the Tax Reform Act of 1986).
The proposal would apply to GRATs created after the date of enactment. It is estimated to raise revenue by $3.25 billion over ten years. This includes $29 million for fiscal 2010 and $61 million for fiscal 2011, which ends September 30, 2011, and therefore picks up the estate tax from the estates of decedents who die in calendar 2010. Since even a two-year GRAT created in May 2009 would already be subject to estate tax under current law if the grantor dies by December 31, 2010, it is hard to figure out how that extra tax revenue would be generated if the GRAT were required to last longer than two years. Maybe the estimate contemplates additional gift tax on donors who forgo GRATs and make gifts in less leveraged forms.What Happens Next<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n
On April 29, 2009, the\u00a0conference report on the congressional budget resolution<\/a>\u00a0was passed by votes of 233-193 in the House and 53-43 in the Senate.\u00a0 In general, the budget resolution affirmed the commitment to making 2009 estate tax law permanent, identified in the Administration budget proposals at the end of February.\u00a0 But\u00a0section 325 of the budget resolution<\/a>\u00a0apparently places any additional estate tax relief in the Senate under a \u201cpay for\u201d discipline in the generic context of \u201ctax relief that supports working families \u2026 [and] businesses.\u201d\u00a0 And\u00a0section 317 of the budget resolution<\/a>\u00a0contains similar language with respect to the House in the generic context of \u201csavings incentives.\u201d
Naturally, it is not clear whether this \u201cpay for\u201d discipline would apply even to making 2009 law permanent (which, beginning in 2011, would be a tax cut), or if it would apply only to expansions beyond 2009 law, such as the $5 million exemption and 35% rate that received conditional support in the Senate, as described in\u00a0Capital Letter No. 16<\/a>. The Administration\u2019s February budget proposals appear to have tried to make 2009 law the new \u201cbaseline\u201d for some purposes.\u00a0 But the congressional rhetoric of late April was sweeping enough to have supported either approach.\u00a0 The fact of the matter is that the politicians will make a political decision, and at this time, as usual, that is hard to predict.\u00a0 <\/p>\n\n\n\n