Here's What Caused Trump to Fire DHS Secretary Kristi Noem
Fairfax Is the Real State of the Union for Democrats
US Has Almost Complete Control of Iran's Airspace
Ken Paxton Just Made a Huge Offer in the Texas Senate Primary Campaign...
Ground Troops in Iran? Here's What the White House Just Said About It.
House Blocks Nancy Mace's Sexual Harassment Resolution
Trump's Way of War
A Career Criminal Was Arrested in NYC for Setting a Man on Fire....
Fetterman Was Asked About the U.S. Torpedoing an Iranian Ship and His Answer...
‘Luigi: The Musical’ Is More Than Tasteless — It’s a Warning
Virginia's Lt. Gov. Was Asked About the Woman Murdered by an Illegal Alien....
Washington State Bill to Ban Law Enforcement from Wearing Mask Nears Passage
Trump Tops Obama in Own-Party Approval As MAGA Continues to Place Their Faith...
Steve Hilton Slams Gavin Newsom for Treating California As a Stepping Stone to...
Operation Epic Fury Is Sending Shockwaves Through Beijing
OPINION

Time to Bury the "Death Tax"

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Time to Bury the "Death Tax"

Kevin Hancock simply wants to harvest trees -- sustainably -- and create jobs in the process. The federal government may put a stop to all that.

His business, Hancock Lumber, has been in the family for six generations. It owns 30,000 acres of Maine timberland and employs 550 people. But Kevin already knows that when his elderly mother dies, he’ll have to sell off huge swaths of his land to pay the ensuing tax bill.

Advertisement

Going Rogue by Sarah Palin FREE

He recently warned a Senate committee that, “Once it has been sold to a developer, it will be parceled off and will no longer be maintained as publicly-open forests. This is particularly a shame in southern Maine, where green-space and curtailment of sprawl is a major political issue.”

It’s an example of the long reach of the death tax -- the penalty families have to pay when a loved one dies and leaves them significant assets. Yet, for Hancock and many others, some relief may be in sight. In 2001, lawmakers passed a law that gradually phased out the levy, which has destroyed countless family-owned businesses over the years.

The death tax has been stepped down from 55 percent (for those in the top tax bracket) 8 years ago to 45 percent. But that gradual decline was just a prelude for 2010, when the tax will -- finally -- disappear all together.

Unfortunately, like the killer in so many slasher movies, the death tax could return to menace family businesses again in 2011. Unless Congress acts, it’s scheduled to return to the obscene 55 percent rate after next year, thus reawakening the nightmare of the American Dream.

Lawmakers are poised to take action soon. But Americans should insist they take the right action.

For example, earlier this year the Senate passed a non-binding amendment that would set the death tax at 35 percent starting next year. That’s quite a jump from zero percent, and would be a big step in the wrong direction.

Advertisement

The sensible thing would be for lawmakers to leave the current policy in place and allow the death tax to go away completely. With the Senate already facing titanic struggles over health care, global warming and federal spending this year, there’s no point in attempting to upend a policy that’s already set in law. Besides, Americans deserve to see how much better things would be without the death tax, especially since repealing it might help our country -- finally -- pull out of recession.

The death tax is a job killer. Heritage Foundation economists found that the federal levy leads to the loss of between 170,000 and 250,000 potential jobs each year. (It’s impossible to be more specific, simply because those jobs were never created in the first place. We certainly could use them now).

How does it kill jobs? Partly because it encourages wealthy Americans to spend their money today rather than invest it in growing a business. After all, we’re all going to die. What’s the point of building a bigger nest egg if Washington is just going to take a third of it, a half of it, or even more?

Because the estate tax discourages investment, it also holds down wage growth. Since businesses have less funding, they’re less able to purchase new tools and equipment. So workers are less productive and suffer slower wage and salary growth.

Advertisement

The death tax also hammers some Americans more than others, since it especially targets landowners. Millions of farmers, ranchers and homeowners have, like the Hancock family, improved their land. Yet when they die, the federal government punishes their heirs.

Death and taxes, they say, are both inevitable. But it’s not inevitable that one must lead to the other.

Americans are set to get a glimpse of life without the death tax next year. After that, Lawmakers should act to make sure this levy goes away. Completely and forever.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement