The authors argue that the goals of estate and gift taxation are not served by taxing closely held businesses when the recipient of the business actively participates in its operation. Further, the authors suggest that taxing closely held businesses tends to harm capital production. The authors propose an approach to estate and gift taxation that encourages productive behavior by the recipients of wealth
Following the near-death experience of the federal gift and estate tax in 2010, the hundredth annive...
Present law fails to integrate the income and transfer (i.e., estate and gift) taxation of trusts; a...
The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA, P.L. 107-16) repeals the esta...
The authors argue that the goals of estate and gift taxation are not served by taxing closely held b...
Supporters of the estate and gift tax argue that it provides progressivity in the federal tax system...
This Article considers two aspects of converting the U.S. transfer tax system to one in which burden...
While the estate and gift tax area has by no means been ignored in the legal literature, it has not ...
The current estate tax raises little revenue, yet is ill designed to further the social goals used t...
Professor Lawrence Zelenak\u27s recent Article provides an excellent analysis of the relevant issues...
We study the effects of abolishing estate taxation in a quantitative and realistic framework that in...
The estate tax was enacted because of concerns about the impact of large concentrations of dynastic ...
In a previous work appearing in this Journal, the authors proposed an approach to estate and gift ta...
This paper surveys, integrates, and extends research on estate and gift taxes. The paper begins with...
The last major reform in the United States estate and gift tax occurred in 1954. The system still ne...
"Estate planning provides for orderly distribution of your assets during your lifetime and at death....
Following the near-death experience of the federal gift and estate tax in 2010, the hundredth annive...
Present law fails to integrate the income and transfer (i.e., estate and gift) taxation of trusts; a...
The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA, P.L. 107-16) repeals the esta...
The authors argue that the goals of estate and gift taxation are not served by taxing closely held b...
Supporters of the estate and gift tax argue that it provides progressivity in the federal tax system...
This Article considers two aspects of converting the U.S. transfer tax system to one in which burden...
While the estate and gift tax area has by no means been ignored in the legal literature, it has not ...
The current estate tax raises little revenue, yet is ill designed to further the social goals used t...
Professor Lawrence Zelenak\u27s recent Article provides an excellent analysis of the relevant issues...
We study the effects of abolishing estate taxation in a quantitative and realistic framework that in...
The estate tax was enacted because of concerns about the impact of large concentrations of dynastic ...
In a previous work appearing in this Journal, the authors proposed an approach to estate and gift ta...
This paper surveys, integrates, and extends research on estate and gift taxes. The paper begins with...
The last major reform in the United States estate and gift tax occurred in 1954. The system still ne...
"Estate planning provides for orderly distribution of your assets during your lifetime and at death....
Following the near-death experience of the federal gift and estate tax in 2010, the hundredth annive...
Present law fails to integrate the income and transfer (i.e., estate and gift) taxation of trusts; a...
The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA, P.L. 107-16) repeals the esta...