Freeze and Squeeze
Why planning works to preserve
family businesses
Despite all
the press coverage about the death tax, in reality, few people worry about
confiscatory estate taxes. However,
those owning family businesses and farms seem to provide a disproportionate share
of federal and state revenues at death. Although
there is some temporary federal relief offered if you accept the moving goal
post formula for estate taxes, the operative word is “temporary”. A significant and new problem for many is the
increasing percentage of estates subject to higher income taxes and the recently
enacted estate and inheritance taxes imposed by revenue-starved states.
The solution?
Consider
making charitable gifts of those assets that trigger both income and estate tax
at death (income in respect of a decedent or IRD), and keep the estate from ballooning
in value. With
a little prior planning, there is no need to pay unnecessary taxes if owners
freeze the value of their growing business and transfer it before tax
liabilities mount up. How does that
work? Easily, but few taxpayers take
advantage of their right to make tax-free gifts to heirs on a regular
basis. It is a shame, because over time,
significant value can be compressed and given via lifetime and annual exclusion
gifts, especially if husband and wife join to make full use of gifts to
children, in-laws, and grandchildren.
For many families with four married children, and grandchildren, it is
common for half a million dollars in estate value to be transferred free of
tax. By making those gifts repeatedly
over the years, most estates would see significant tax savings. Yet few families take advantage of this
right. Why? Most family business owners resist making
gifts fearing loss of control, and are unwilling to take a proactive long-range
view of the planning process.
Plan now, not later.
Sam Walton,
founder of the Wal-Mart empire, is a great example of
successful transition tax planning. He
passed the bulk of his business interests to his heirs with little tax erosion
by preparing the plan early in his career.
Sam and Helen started their retail business after World War II with
$5,000 in savings and $20,000 borrowed from Helen’s father; then built that
stake into a multi-billion dollar marketing behemoth. Along the way, they learned lessons in
business succession planning and resolved to create a family owned business,
Walton Enterprises, in which they transferred 20% of their business interests
to each of their four children (Rob, John, Jim, and Alice) and kept their
remaining 20% portion as separate shares.
When Sam passed away in 1992, owning only his 10% ownership interest in
the $26 billion Walton business, the taxable value of his estate was much
smaller because of his prior gifts. Although
specific details are not available for the entire Walton zero estate tax plan, Sam’s
10% ownership of Walton Enterprises passed tax-free through a marital trust for
his wife. As reported by Forbes
magazine’s best estimates of family wealth in the annual “Forbes 400”
(September 2002), his planning meant that each of the five principal Walton
heirs is now worth $18.8 billion. When
Mrs. Walton passes on, her interests divide when the non-voting shares flow to the
Walton charities, while the voting shares transfer to their younger heirs who
will continue to control the retail, banking and real estate business.
The
planning concept is simple. The best way
to reduce or eliminate estate taxes is to freeze the value and give it away
before assets appreciate, so worth grows in the heirs’ hands. This transfers the tax value. Maintaining control is a different issue; keep
the managing interest separate and retain command of the family business. The advantage of passing non-voting ownership
interests to heirs is that discounting and compression may result in a lower
tax value when heirs do not have significant management influence. Typically, the IRS allows independent
appraisers to lessen the taxable value of a business if there are minority
interests, limited marketability, and lack of control. That is the “squeeze” in the planning, and it means
that it becomes easier to pass a business at a discount. This is not “do it yourself brain surgery”;
proper planning and legal procedures must be used, so seek competent counsel
and do it right.
Had that
unplanned growth and value stayed in Sam and Helen Walton’s hands, and been
subject to tax under current rates, the tax bill would exceed $47 billion today. It would be hard to imagine any family
business being unaffected by a need for that kind of liquidity in just nine
months after the death of a principal owner.
What Sam Walton achieved
through effective planning -
© 2002 -- Vaughn W. Henry
Gift and Estate Planning Services --
217.529.1958 -- 217.529.1959 fax -- VWHenry@aol.com
On the web at gift-estate.com

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