After a busy year end and first few months of 2010, we have gone from thinking the 2009 estate tax (at least a patch) would probably be carried over to 2010 to looking like taxpayers may have an option to select whether they want to pay capital gains tax or estate tax.
Jay Heflin is reporting in this piece in the Hill that there is apparently bipartisan support to allow estates of decedents dying in 2010 to select using the no estate tax/carryover basis regime of 2010 or whatever estate tax that Congress reinstates at some point this year. I heard something about this last week and just chuckled at the prospect of it becoming law. Apparently now it is an alternative being seriously considered and has some momentum.
Heflin reports that Senator Kyl of Arizona believes that he can get an estate tax bill with $5 million dollar portable exemptions and a 35% top estate tax rate passed in the Senate. Last week, acting chairman of the House Ways and Means committee, Rep. Levin, suggested that this taxpayer selection option deserves serious consideration, especially since Congress had left taxpayers in such limbo with the estate tax.
But here’s the rub: To pass Kyl’s bill, Congress has to agree on some pretty significant budget cuts and that will be hard to do. Given how deeply in debt we are right now, I still would not be surprised to see Congress do nothing and let the estate tax roll back in with 55% top rates and $1 million exemptions in 2011. Kyl says he can get the support needed to make these cuts and get his bill passed. We’ll see. Maybe that is what the Easter bunny will bring us this year.