MLMIA: Push to End Estate Tax
Gets Boost in Congress 
By Marcie Cook  Assistant Chair Legislative Committee
The perennial Republican effort to repeal inheritance taxes is gaining significant Democratic support, prompting House GOP leaders to set an early June vote to?gradually phase out the estate tax over the next decade.

An almost-identical repeal was included in the GOP's - $792 billion tax cut that was vetoed by President Clinton last year, but supporters say the 44 Democrats who are among the current version's 238 House co-sponsors could help persuade the White House to sign it.

"There is broad support for this bill," said Rep. Jennifer Dunn, R-Wash. "The death tax is unfair, unethical and unnecessary."

Only about 2 percent of Americans pay estate taxes, and under current law $675,000 in assets are exempt. That exemption is scheduled to rise to $1 million by 2006, but supporters of repeal say the tax that ranges up to 55 percent still would most hurt small business people and land-rich farmers while the wealthiest people are often able to escape through tax shelters.

"The very rich are not paying it because they know to get around it" said Rep. Eva Clayton, D-N.C. "This tax disproportionately falls on the people who can't adjust their accounts ahead of time."

Clayton is among the Democratic members of the Congressional Black Caucus, many from rural districts, who have signed into the bill. First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton also has called in her New York Senate campaign for raising the exemption to $1.75 million for family farms and family-owned businesses.

But other Democrats say out-right repeal of the tax would mainly benefit the wealthy and take too much surplus money away from other priorities, such as providing a Medicare prescription drug benefit. The repeal would cost and estimated $65 billion over 10 years.

The most recent Internal Revenue Service statistics show that in 1997 about 43,000 returns were filed in which $16.6 billion in net estate taxes were owed.

Of those, 329 were for estates of $20 million or more, owing $3.4 billion in taxes, while 36,000 returns for estates between $600,000 and $2.5 million generated about $5.1 billion for the government. Stocks make up about a third of the assets of estates subject to the tax, the statistics showed.

House Democratic leaders, acknowledging the political potency of the issue, are likely to propose an alternative  similar to that advocated by Mrs. Clinton  that would raise the amount of exempt assets for farms and family-owned businesses. A democratic measure introduced earlier this year would raise that exemption to $4 million for a couple.

Marcie Cook is the CEO of America's MLM Consultants (http://www.mlmconsultant.com), one of the Premier Network Marketing consulting companies worldwide. She is also Assistant chairperson of the 1999/December 2002 Legislative Council.
E-Mail: marcie@mlmconsultant.com
210-494-3884

For information about *MLMIA call: Doris Wood (949-854-0484)
*MLM International Association
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