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Sanders and Other Tax Proposals: What They Mean and What to Advise Clients to do Now – 2 Hour In Depth Look
Presented by: Jonathan G. Blattmachr Esq., Robert S. Keebler CPA, Joy Matak JD LLM and Martin M. Shenkman Esq.
What a difference in estate tax an election can make!
Democratic estate tax proposals could dramatically alter estate and related planning. Clients should act now.
While it is impossible to forecast what tax and expenditure changes will be enacted this year, practitioners need to advise clients immediately about changes that could alter almost every aspect of estate planning. There is no way to know what will happen, but it seems there is no shortage of proposals. Recent plans put forth by well-placed Democratic Senators include reducing the estate tax exemption to $3.5 million, and the gift tax exemption to $1 million; providing for no step up in basis for assets in a grantor trust if not included in the gross estate (oh, you didn’t know you could do that?); a $20,000 cap for gift tax annual exclusion gifts (and no de minimus level, so having friends over for dinner or hosting a child’s wedding will result in a taxable gift); a 50-year limit for GST trusts; estate tax rates up to 65% for estates over $1B; no discounts for entities funded with non-business assets beginning probably after September 30; certain minority discounts being disallowed; GRATs required to have a minimum 10-year term, maximum term of life expectancy plus 10 years, and a minimum value for the taxable remainder of 25%; new grantor trusts (and some old Section 678 trusts) being included in the estate of the grantor at death; and a gains tax imposed on inherited assets. There are many special effective date rules and, if enacted, these proposals may change estate planning more than any changes to the tax system in years. Advising clients of these changes seems critical to consider. The time to act is here. This presentation will offer ways to do so. Please don’t miss it.
Continuing Education Credits
InterActive Legal is not an approved Continuing Education (CE) Sponsor. However, several states and regulatory agencies for a variety of professionals that participate on our teleconferences may still receive continuing education credit for their participation. If a participant wishes to receive CE credit for their participation in these teleconferences, they must apply to receive credit on their own and through their individual states and regulatory authorities. It is the responsibility of the participant to file for CE credit and is not guaranteed by the webinar sponsors.
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Speaker Bios
Mr. Blattmachr is a Principal in ILS Management, LLC and a retired member of Milbank Tweed Hadley & McCloy LLP in New York, NY and of the Alaska, California and New York Bars. He is recognized as one of the most creative trusts and estates lawyers in the country and is listed in The Best Lawyers in America. He has written and lectured extensively on estate and trust taxation and charitable giving.
Robert S. Keebler, CPA, MST, AEP (Distinguished) is a partner with Keebler & Associates, LLP and is a 2007 recipient of the prestigious Accredited Estate Planners (Distinguished) award from the National Association of Estate Planners & Councils.
Robert has been named by CPA Magazine as one of the Top 100 Most Influential Practitioners in the United States and one of the Top 40 Tax Advisors to Know During a Recession. His practice includes family wealth transfer and preservation planning, charitable giving, retirement distribution planning, and estate administration.
Joy Matak, JD, LLM, is a Partner at Sax, LLP and Co-Leader of the firm’s Trusts and Estates Practice. Based in the Parsippany office, she has more than 20 years of diversified experience as a wealth transfer strategist with an extensive background in providing tax services to multi-generational wealth families, owners of closely-held businesses, and high-net-worth individuals and their trusts and estates. Matak provides clients with wealth transfer strategy planning to accomplish estate planning and business succession goals. She also performs tax compliance, including gift tax, estate tax, and income tax returns for trusts and estates, and consulting services related to generation skipping including transfer tax planning, asset protection, life insurance structuring, and post-mortem planning. She has authored or co-authored articles for publications that include Tax Management Estates, Gifts and Trusts (BNA) Journal; Leimberg Information Services, Inc. (LISI); and Estate Planning Review (The CCH Journal). Matak recently co-authored a book on the new tax reform law entitled Estate Planning: Estate, Tax and Other Planning after the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. She received a Master of Laws, Taxation, with distinction, from Georgetown University Law Center, a Juris Doctor, cum laude, from Vermont Law School, and a Bachelor of Science, Mathematics, cum laude, from Seton Hall University. She is a member of the Estate Planning Council of Northern New Jersey and the New Jersey State Bar Association.
Martin M. Shenkman is an attorney in private practice in Fort Lee, NJ, and New York City. His practice concentrates on estate and tax planning, planning for closely held business, and estate administration. Mr. Shenkman is an author of over 42 books and more than 1,000 articles. He is an editorial board member of Trusts & Estates Magazine and the Matrimonial Strategist, and an advisor for InterActive Legal. He is the recipient of many awards including being a 2013 recipient of the prestigious Accredited Estate Planners (Distinguished) award from the National Association of Estate Planning Counsels. Mr. Shenkman was named Financial Planning Magazine 2012 Pro-Bono Financial Planner of the Year for his efforts on behalf of those living with chronic illness and disability. Investment Adviser Magazine featured him on the cover of its April 2013 issue naming as the lead of their “all-star lineup of tax experts.”