When does the state lack authority to tax a “resident trust” on out-of-state income? In this report, McGladrey discusses a number of strategies that advisers should consider in order to minimize the state-level tax liability for a trust by moving it to a more taxpayer-friendly jurisdiction. The article provides case studies dating back to 2013, where in some cases, advisers and their clients either minimized or even avoided state tax liability altogether on undistributed trust income.
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The American Tax Payer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA) was passed on New Year’s Day 2013, and established the first permanentset of estate, gift and generation skipping transfer (GST) tax provisions in 12 years. Each year, the administration puts forth tax proposals that may change the current law. This article provides a quick summary of several of the latest revenue proposals submitted by the Obama administration that might affect individual taxpayers and future estate and tax planning strategies.
In 2013, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), a nonprofit group of reporters, shattered the long-held view that offshore bank secrecy was impenetrable. The group had received massive leaks detailing individual offshore bank accounts, which they shared with the public on their website. This was the first of hundreds of stories about the financial affairs of high-net-worth individuals overseas.
President Obama on January 20, 2015, used his sixth State of the Union address to lay out his tax policy agenda to the new Republican-controlled 114th Congress. In a subsequent speech, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew reaffirmed the Administration's tax reform goals that were first outlined in a 2012 'framework' for business tax reform. Meanwhile, the Republican chairmen of the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee have responded to the President's State of the Union address, and are laying out their own goals for tax reform.
Glenmede's Fall Newsletter topics include leveraging social media to meet organizational goals and guidance for managing transitions to retirement that should be navigated with a comprehensive yet flexible plan that encompasses current cash flow, lifetime asset base and family legacy and philanthropy.
Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management Tax Topics discusses possible outcomes from the mid-term elections, such as treatment of the nearly 60 tax "extender" provisions that expired at the end of 2013. Also covered is possible future tax reform and the loss of cherished tax benefits such as the deductible contributions to employer-sponsored retirement accounts and the charitable deduction.
While the large federal exclusion may mean that many people no longer have federal estate tax issues, they may still have state estate tax issues. The challenge is balancing the desire to mitigate estate taxes with maximizing a basis step-up for appreciated property at an individual’s death. Put differently, planning has gotten harder, not easier!
This issue covers the release of the IRS 2015 inflation-adjusted numbers with a run down of important points to keep in mind including things to remember for year-end gifts, last chance for "portability" filing and the alternative minimum tax (AMT) deduction.
The Internal Revenue Service has issued long-anticipated final Treasury Regulations delineating which expenses of an estate or a non-grantor trust are not subject to the 2% floor on miscellaneous itemized deductions.
Policy and Taxation Group commissioned important research by leading pollster Frank Luntz to understand why resentment toward high net worth individuals has increased so much in recent years and what the impact of heightened class conflict has been and will be on the future of the fight for estate tax relief. As Policy and Taxation Group has remained exclusively focused on the estate tax fight, several PATG families launched a separate effort called Each American Dream to continue this valuable research and reduce the stigmatization of success in the economic debate.