Glad To Pay Estate Tax
for Children's Trust Fund
By Peter Barnes
If anyone should want to repeal the estate tax, it's me.
I'm a successful
businessman with two sons I love dearly.
Eliminating
the estate tax, as the Senate voted to do last Wednesday, would
let me pass the full fruits of my success to my children.
But I strongly
oppose repeal. Rather than end the estate tax, as my fellow millionaire
President Bush advocates, I believe we should mend it.
Although portrayed
as a death tax, the estate tax is, in fact, a levy on the inheritances
of living heirs. Big inheritances give children of the wealthy -
often generations removed from the original fortune - an enormous
advantage in life. If anything deserves taxation, it's these unearned
windfalls.
Less than 2
percent of estates are large enough to be subject to the tax today.
To make sure we tax only the very largest estates, we could immediately
raise the exemption to $ 1 million for individuals and $ 2 million
for couples, and regularly adjust the exemption to keep up with
inflation.
Critics of the
estate tax say it hinders small-business owners and farmers from
passing their operations on to their children. But these small enterprises
make up only a tiny fraction of the taxed estates. And if current
protections for family enterprises are inadequate, then strengthen
them. But don't throw the baby out with the bath water.
The debate over
the estate tax goes right to the core of the American experiment.
Unlike Europe, America was founded not as a hereditary class system,
but as a meritocracy. The playing fields would be level, and the
best players would win.
But those favoring
repeal of the estate tax want to end the American experiment. They
want to give children of the rich a growing lead, generation after
generation, while leaving millions of other children further behind.
I was lucky
enough to have parents who paid for my education at Harvard, helped
me purchase my first home and invested in my first startup. Now
I've established trust funds for my sons to do similar things.
But what about
the millions of American children who aren't as fortunate as mine?
If capitalism is the only game in town, it seems unfair to give
my children millions of dollars in startup capital and none to other
players.
Today, one out
of six children lives in poverty. How will we reduce poverty in
future generations if these children start out empty-handed?
Every child
should have a stake in the American Dream. So let's make that the
special mission of the estate tax. We should earmark estate-tax
revenue for a Universal Children's Trust Fund.
That money could
then be divided equally among children under age 18. It could be
placed into tax-deferred children's savings accounts, similar to
IRAs, managed by parents. When children turn 18 they could tap into
their modest inheritances for higher education, first home purchase
or a business startup.
Just as Social
Security was the right thing to do in the 20th century, a Universal
Children's Trust is the right thing to do in the 21st century.
Instead of repealing
the estate tax, we should make it the guarantor of the American
Dream.
Then I would be even happier to pay the estate tax.
Barnes co-founded
Working Assets Long Distance and is a member of the national organization
Responsible Wealth. He can be reached at pmproj@progressive. org.
Copyright 2001,
Houston Chronicle.
|