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View definitions for estate tax

estate tax

noun as in tax on a deceased person's estate

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More than a century ago amid soaring inequality and the rise of stratospherically wealthy families such as the Mellons and Rockefellers, Congress created the estate tax as a way to raise money and clip the fortunes of the rich at death.

More than half of the nation’s 100 richest individuals have used GRATs and other trusts to avoid estate tax, the analysis shows.

Without the $500 million or so passed through the trusts, he said, Powell Jobs’ heirs would have to sell stock that she intends to give to charity to pay her estate tax bill.

Virginia gets high marks, for example, for a low minimum wage, no estate tax and for being a right-to-work state, which discourages union membership.

He added that lawmakers should go beyond reforms targeting the accounts directly and address a potential estate tax dodge related to Roths.

At present, the federal estate tax kicks in at estates valued at more than $5.34 million.

Trying to rally a nation against the estate tax is a tough lift.

But in my experience, arguing over the estate tax for much of the past decade, the name has nothing to do with it.

They get very upset if you suggest otherwise, whether you call it the estate tax, the death tax, or "fred".

But there are still sticking points, including scheduled increases in the estate tax.

For the commutation tax there should be substituted an estate tax rising from 3d.

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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