For Immediate Release: Thursday, May 10, 2012
Contact: Palmer Schoening, 202-969-2444 ext. 507
palmer@americanfamilybusinesses.org

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The American Family Business Institute (AFBI) today announced that Governor Haslam and other individuals crucial to the repeal of the Tennessee death tax were awarded the organization’s Champion of American Family Businesses Award on May 9th at the Capitol in Nashville.
“Tennessee will now be among the majority of states with no death tax. This move will make Tennessee a more attractive environment for family businesses and retirees. These individuals have shown particularly strong leadership on working to repeal Tennessee’s inheritance tax. On behalf of family businesses across America and Tennessee, this award is a token of our appreciation for the important work that they have done.”
AFBI’s Champion of American Family Businesses Award goes to individuals for their extraordinary work to help protect and preserve the legacy of family businesses. AFBI award recipients support legislation that eliminates the estate tax, cuts individual and business taxes, and ends harmful regulations for family business owners. The recipients are:
• Governor Bill Haslam
• Lt. Governor Ron Ramsey
• House Speaker Beth Harwell
• Representative Charles Sargent
• Lee Barfield – Tennesseans Against Death Taxes
• Justin Owen – President, Beacon Center of Tennessee
• Art Laffer – Laffer Associates
• Jim Brown – NFIB
• Rhedona Rose – Tennessee Farm Bureau

Tags: beth harwell, bill haslam, champion of american family businesses, death tax, governor haslam, lt. governor ramsey, ron ramsey, tennessee
In response to the first deficit reduction offer released by GOP Members of the Super Committee – an offer which included keeping the current 35 percent Federal Estate Tax rate – the American Family Business Institute’s (AFBI) President Dick Patten released the following statement:
“Republicans serving on the Super Committee cut themselves short by including Federal Estate Taxes as part of their deficit reduction plan.
“If the Super Committee were to propose estate tax repeal over keeping the current estate tax rate, they could actually raise GPD by $1 trillion more and reduce the deficit by an additional 10 percent over the 10-year budget period, according to a recent study by the American Family Business Foundation.
“Furthermore, two of the Super Committee GOP members are signers of AFBI’s ‘Death Tax Repeal Pledge’ and a majority of both Republican and Democrat members have previously supported repeal. This is not the policy recommendation America’s family businesses – the nation’s top job producers – would expect.
“Going forward, AFBI strongly urges all members of the Super Committee to recommend death tax repeal as a part of their deficit reduction plan.”
The GOP offer was reportedly rejected by Democrats.
Tags: committee, death tax, estate tax
A caller on the Rush Limbaugh radio program asked recently about estate taxes. Rush's take? Read below:
“Every year estate planners want to talk to me about estate planning and it seems that they think that the primary objective of any estate planning is going to be to keep money away from the government. So they want to structure trusts, charitable donations, foundations, any number of things, and I always say to 'em, "Yeah, but the problem with doing that is I am getting rid of all my money before I die." "Yeah, but at least the government ain't gonna get it." "Well, I don't care, frankly. I want access to as much of it as I can before I die."
I don't want to have to shelter it all now while I'm still alive so I can't get it just to keep the government from getting it sometime. I go round and round with 'em on it.”
Here’s the full transcript:http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2011/10/25/steve_jobs_and_the_death_tax
What would you tell an estate tax planner?
Tags: death tax, estate planning, estate tax, rush
Today, The Republican Study Committee (RSC) released their "Jobs through Growth Act" which includes permanent death tax repeal, modeled after Congressman Brady's "Death Tax Repeal Permanency Act of 2011" as a main pillar for job creation. Congressman Brady's "Death Tax Repeal Permanency Act of 2011" has been AFBI's main focus in the House of Representatives. An extensive campaign by AFBI to promote HR 1259 has helped the bill gain widespread support; the bill currently has 188 bipartisan cosponsors. According to the National Tax Payers Union, only 20 other bills of the 3500+ currently offered have 150 or more cosponsors - putting death tax repeal in the top .5%. The enthusiastic support from both sides of the isle has encouraged the 177 member Republican Study Committee to adopt the legislative language of HR 1259 for their "Growth through Jobs Act" which AFBI has officially endorsed. We will continue to keep you updated on both the "Jobs through Growth Act" and the "Death Tax Repeal Permanency Act of 2011" as they make their way through Congress.
Tags: death tax, estate tax, republican study committee, rsc
According to a new Civitas Institute poll, voters in North Carolina don't care much for their state estate tax. In fact, 66% oppose it, compared to just 25% who favor. This matches up with polling at the national level - 2 out of every 3 voters favor Federal Estate Tax Repeal.
Click here to read the article detailing North Carolina voters' opinion of their state estate tax. The poll was conducted; for the Civitas Institute in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Tags: death tax, estate tax, north carolina
Former Treasury Economist Stephen Entin and AFBF President Dick Patten coauthored an oped which appeared today on Forbes.com explaining how repealing the Federal Estate Tax will reduce the deficit.
The article is based on a report we published last week showing that eliminating the Death Tax would cover just over 30% of the $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction the Super Committee must find by Thanksgiving.
You can learn more by watching this video of our event last week in Washington, D.C., attended by nearly 100 Capitol Hill staffers, journalists and others.
Don't be bamboozled. Repealing the estate tax - which, by the way, is supported by over 500 economists from across the country - is the best way forward.
Tags: death tax, estate tax, supercommittee
Congress’ new Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction has been tasked with slashing a minimum of $1.2 trillion from the projected federal budget deficit over the next decade and pressure is already mounting for the so-called “super-committee” to include higher estate taxes as part of its plan.
But a new report released today by the American Family Business Foundation (AFBF) shows that repealing the federal estate tax would do more to reduce the deficit than increasing the tax, generating enough new revenue to cover just over 30% of the $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction required by 2021. The study was conducted by tax policy expert Stephen J. Entin, the president of the Institute for Research on the Economics of Taxation, and a former deputy undersecretary of the Treasury.
Entin’s analysis examined the revenue-generating potential of various estate tax exemptions and rates.
Support for higher estate taxes in the name of increasing government revenues or reducing deficits is based on the unrealistic theory that every dollar not collected by the Treasury is a dollar lost – what economists dub “static” loss, Entin explained.
In the real economy, however, that same dollar, if not claimed by government, is often invested in new equipment, employees, or technology intended to increase a company’s revenue. As companies grow, they produce more revenue for government as well. It is this “dynamic” activity that Entin reviews in his AFBF report, “Estate Taxes, Deficits, and Budget Implications”.
“This dynamic method demonstrates that the estate tax reduction would significantly lower, not raise, the federal deficit, and shows that the potential gains in GDP are substantial,” said Entin.
When compared to the various estate tax rate and exemption combinations being recommended by members of Congress, Entin calculates that repeal is by far the best policy option. Across a 10-year budget window – 2012 to 2021 – he finds that repeal of the federal estate tax would:
•cover 30.18% of the $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction required of the Super Committee by 2021;
•reduce the total budget deficit by 5.19% over the period and by 11.49% in 2021;
•lead to a 2.26% increase in GDP ($538 billion) by 2021, for a cumulative gain of nearly $3 trillion over the period, compared to what would have happened under current law;
•increase federal revenues over the 10-year period by about $362 billion (compared to current estate tax law); by 2021 the annual gain would be about $88 billion per year.
The chart below shows the positive impacts of Federal Estate Tax repeal:

According to AFBF President Dick Patten, “Elimination of the estate tax is as close as one gets to a free lunch in economics. It is time to take advantage of it.”
Tags: afbf, death tax, entin, estate tax, super committee
In December 2010, the American Family Business Foundation worked with Douglas Holtz-Eakin to calculate the actual impact of the death tax on jobs, at the various proposed rates; Growth Consequences of Estate Tax Reform: Impacts on Small and Family Businesses provides an authoritative source to the number of jobs lost at each possible death tax rate, as opposed to full repeal. If we keep the current compromised rate of 35%, with a $5 million dollar exemption rate per individual, approximately 857.61 million jobs would be lost compared to complete repeal. The Obama Administration has proposed a return to the 2009 levels of 45%, with a $3.5 million dollar exemption per individual; according to the study, this will keep 1.105 million people out of work. In releasing their “Living Within Our Means and Investing in the Future” “jobs" plan the Obama Administration is proposing hampering family businesses and farms with an even larger death tax burden. This is not a path towards economic recovery.
The Obama Administration’s most recent economic growth and deficit reduction proposal includes comprehensive tax reform, expiration of the Bush tax cuts, and return to the 2009 death tax rates – 45% over a $3.5 million exemption. According to their calculation, this will reduce the deficit by $866 billion over 10 years. This of course is an optimistic calculation of the combined effects of the 2001 and 2003 tax cut expiration and the return to the 2009 estate tax levels. There is no way to determine the exact measure of the death tax burden within these parameters, and the plan neglects to report the job losses from raising taxes on the most productive sector of the economy – family businesses.
In order to encourage economic growth and spur job creation, Congress should immediately reduce the burden to America’s family farmers and small business owners. One quick and easy fix would be to repeal the death tax and allow entrepreneurs to use the capital, currently tied up in estate tax planning funds or accounts, to reinvest in their businesses and create jobs. According to Obama’s plan, the wealthy individuals with the estate tax planning funds don’t need to receive tax cuts because “under today’s laws, those who can afford expert advice can avoid paying their fair share.” This “expert advice” is a deadweight loss to the economy and comes at the expense of business expansion and jobs. It is capital taken away from its most productive use as working capital in family businesses and diverted into protecting against a looming death tax of up to 55%.
A pro-growth jobs plan should include death tax elimination and fiscally responsible policies. The majority of Republican Presidential candidates have signed the American Family Business Institute’s death tax repeal pledge and, if elected, will work toward complete elimination of the tax. HR 1259, a bill in Congress to repeal the death tax, currently has over 173 bi-partisan cosponsors.
Tags: death tax, economic growth, job creation, obama's jobs plan
Bad ideas die hard.
Michael Tanner, a scholar at the Cato Institute, writes at National Review Online that some "Democrats are pushing for tax hikes. A leaked memo from supercommittee documents includes proposals for a 5.4 percent surtax on families earning $1 million or more, an increase in the estate tax."
As AFBI shared earlier this week, the political and economic facts show why this is a no-win proposal. Unfortunately, cold, hard facts are not convincing to some Members of Congress.

Comic strip courtesy of Non Sequitur
Tags: death tax, estate tax, legislation, super committee
Mitt Romney, one of the nine Presidential candidates to sign the Death Tax Repeal Pledge, has made death tax repeal a component of his comprehensive economic growth plan.
Romney understands that the tax has "catastrophic" effects on family businesses, according to an ABC News description of his plan. Romney is absolutely correct, as family business owners and farmers such as Jeff Page, Pearl Marr, Clayton Leverett, Eugene Sukup, and many more can readily attest.
When family business owners face the death tax, their employees are the first ones to feel the cut. ABC News cites a 2003 Heritage Foundation study, finding that repealing the estate tax would create 170,000 to 250,000 jobs. A more recent study by former Congressional Budget Office Director Douglas Holtz-Eakin found that the number of jobs created by estate tax repeal could come closer to one million.
AFBI applauds Mitt Romney for recognizing that the estate tax imposes a heavy cost on the economy and working for repeal.
Tags: 2012 presidential election, death tax, death tax repeal pledge, estate tax, family business, farm, job creation
Don Quixote, meet your match.
Reuters reports that some Democrats on the House Ways and Means committee are living in fantasy land. They are proposing that the Select Joint Committee on Deficit Reduction (i.e., "Super Committee") hike the estate tax as a revenue measure. Of course, this flies in the face of economic reality. Hiking the estate tax will not increase revenue, but will decrease total federal revenues while increasing the deficit.
Even if these Members of Congress can't see the economic reality, they should see the political reality. As AFBI's blog reported earlier, the majority of the committee opposes hiking the estate tax. The committee's staff director was a major force behind the 2001 temporary estate tax repeal law.
And a majority of the House of Representatives, including the 170 bipartisan Members who have cosponsored the Death tax Repeal Permanency Act (HR 1259), support permanent repeal. Hiking the estate tax is not a winning proposition.
Don Quixote came to his senses after a rather humbling ordeal. Hopefully the Ways and Means Democrats will come to their senses faster than the man of la mancha.
Tags: death tax, estate tax, legislation, super committee
The Super Committee (aka, the Select Joint Committee on Deficit Reduction) made a super hire with the selection of Mark Prater to serve as staff director, according to the Seattle Times.
Prater currently serves as the deputy staff director and chief tax counsel for the powerful Senate Finance Committee.
Prater's accomplishments during his two decades at the committee include pushing the 2001 estate tax repeal legislation through the committee. The Seattle Times reports that he "helped steer President George W. Bush's landmark tax-cut package through that committee in 2001 -- across-the-board rollbacks in income- and estate-tax rates."
Prater's selection by the Super Committee's bi-partisan co-chairs - Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) and Representative Jeb Hensarling (R-TX-5) - indicates that the committee understands that raising the death tax burden is the wrong way to solve the deficit crisis.
Tags: capitol hill, death tax, estate tax, legislation, revenue, super committee
Should Israel impose an estate tax to capture additional tax revenue? Not if the tiny Jewish nation wants to keep attracting immigrants and capital, according to an article published today by two Israeli lawyers. Alon Kaplan and Shaun Isaacson explain why an estate tax is likely to reduce overall investment and immigration:
"The bill’s sponsors are only trying to tax the wealthy but they are ignoring the consequences such a law would have on foreign residents, immigrants and returning residents who have come to Israel from all over the world. These people have taken tax advice they sought prior to moving their lives and livelihoods to Israel."
The authors go on to explain that Israel currently offers a number of tax incentives that have been instrumental in driving wealth into the country. However, an estate tax would likely undo those benefits. Worse yet, they would fall hardest on the middle class:
We wish to let [the chief proponent of the estate tax] on into a little secret: the deep pockets of those wealthy people that she wants to get into, enable them to find and pay for sophisticated tax planning structures that are completely legal. When wealthy people establish trusts, foundations and other legal structures that save their heirs from paying estate tax, the citizens left carrying the can are those middle class Israelis who bought apartments with their hard-earned savings but did not have the means to employ sophisticated tax planners.
Researchers have found that in the U.S., superwealthy men like Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, Sr. are able to avoid, if not benefit, from the estate tax, while small business owners and their workers suffer.
If this wasn't argument enough to dissuade the Knesset from imposing an estate tax, the authors point out that the tax lacks moral justification:
Is there a moral justification to tax the estates of citizens who have worked hard, achieved success and have already paid all the relevant taxes in respect of the assets they’ve accumulated? Should they be taxed for their success and their desire to provide for their children with the fruits of their labour?
Several years ago a study found that the U.S. has one of the highest estate taxes in the world, while Israel is among the 24 nations that imposed no estate tax. Does Israel really want to leave the "no death tax" club?
Tags: capital flight, death tax, estate tax, international death tax, israel
This little yellow bottle of mustard has been around since 1900, about as long as the family business began by Ron Dennis’ Russian-immigrant grandfather in1908, which distributes Raye’s Mustard today.
Ron tells the story this way:
“My grandfather — a Russian immigrant — and his four brothers got the entrepreneurial bug back in 1908. They decided to go into the soft drink bottling and distribution business. Then known as Washington County Bottling Works, my grandfather bottled soda and delivered it via horse-drawn wagon to customers. The company even created a few soda drinks of its own, such as the 13 ‘University Club’ flavors. Over time, they became involved in the growing paper business and then, with the advent of mass refrigeration, the food-service distribution business.”
The company’s got a new name these days: Dennis Paper and Food Service. But the same care and attention that began three generations ago is carried on today. The Dennis family continues to grow the business, creating jobs for many local workers in Bangor, Maine. In fact, Dennis explains that today, the company is the “fastest growing distributor in Maine.”
Dennis attributes the company’s success to his grandfather’s values of “hard work, thrift, creativity and diligent reinvestment. Those are the values that I live by, and they are the values that I intend to pass down to my children. I hope to pass the company to them as well.”
But standing in his way is one thing: the death tax. A fact that competitors and potential buyers know all too well and would be more than happy to take advantage of:
“I have already received multiple offers from out-of-state corporations that want to buy my business. These corporations know that my children will face a large death tax and are encouraging me to save them the trouble by liquidating the business.”
Dennis knows that selling the business could cost his employees their jobs.
It would also come at the cost of his family’s third-generation dream.
“I love this company and have no plans to sell it — assuming I can find a better way to pay the tax.”
Click here to read more about Ron Dennis and his family’s piece of the American Dream.
Then ask your Representative to support permanent estate tax repeal.
And by the way, if you haven’t tried Raye’s Mustard, you should. It was declared the world’s best classic yellow mustard when it won the 2006 Napa Valley World-Wide Mustard Competition’s gold medal.
Tags: death tax, estate tax, family business owner of the week


After the budget deal passed on August 2nd, the focus has shifted on to the selection of the twelve members that will sit on the bipartisan Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction. The 6 members from the House- 3 Democrats and 3 Republicans- and 6 members from the Senate will establish a plan to cut the federal deficit by $1.2 trillion, or more, over the next 10 years. It is clear that the budget debates are not over; by Thanksgiving, an agreement on spending cuts to federal programs, or new revenue sources, will be proposed. If no deal is adopted, or if the agreement is voted down by either house or vetoed by the President, before November 23rd, across-the-board cuts will be implemented from defense (50%) and non-defense (50%) spending.
The Senate and Republican selections for the “super committee” have been announced; the following delegates were selected:
• Sen. Pat Toomey (R-PA)
• Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH)
• Sen. John Kyl (R-AZ)
• Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA)
• Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT)
• Sen. John Kerry (D-MA)
• Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-TX-5)
• Rep. Dave Camp (R-MI-4)
• Rep. Fred Upton (R-MI-6)
• Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD-8)
• Rep Jim Clyburn (D-SC-6)
• Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-CA-31)
We are pleased to announce two of the members are Death Tax Repeal Pledge signers, and a majority of them have voted with us in the past. Senator Pat Toomey from Pennsylvania and Representative Fred Upton from Michigan signed the Death Tax Repeal pledge during their 2010 campaigns and have been very supportive of repeal efforts. As current Chairman of the Ways & Means Committee, Representative Dave Camp and his staff has been helping us to promote HR 1259, and will be a great asset to the new deficit committee. Representative Jeb Hensarling, current Republican Conference Chairman, has been selected to sit as co-chair across from democratic Senator Patty Murray, both of which have voted for death tax repeal in the past. Senator John Kyl of Arizona, and current Senate Republican Whip, has voted for repeal in the past, and has been a major advocate for death tax rate reductions; he has recently come out with a statement against rate increases which can be found here. Other members who have also voted for repeal include Senator Max Baucus, current chairman of the Finance Committee, and Senator Rob Portman.
A majority of the members on the super committee have supported our position in the past, and we look forward to working with them again to ensure the death tax rates are not raised, and encourage them to promote repeal.
Tags: death tax, deficit reduction, murray, pledge, spending cuts, super committee, toomey, upton
Reuters columnist Nanette Byrnes published an excellent article today describing AFBI's role in the death tax fight:
"It has been a good year for Dick Patten, the leading opponent of estate taxes in the United States. A bill to end federal estate tax is taking shape on Capitol Hill. Victories in the states are adding momentum to the fight he leads through his Washington-based lobbying group, the American Family Business Institute.
Buoyed by an anti-tax mood that helped turn governors' mansions and statehouses Republican in 2010 and that fueled the debt-ceiling debate in Congress, states are taking action despite weak economies that would seem to make revenue sources sacrosanct. Ohio axed its estate tax. Maine doubled the size that an estate must be before it can be taxed. Oregon and North Carolina fought off plans to increase estate taxes."
Nanette explains AFBI's role in both the state estate and inheritance tax battles and the fight for repeal in Washington, DC.
Click here to read the full article.
Tags: about afbi, death tax, estate tax, news
The immediate future of the death tax appears to be in the hands of 12 soon-to-be-chosen D.C. lawmakers – six Democrats and six Republicans, divided equally among the Senate and House.
This so-called “Super Panel,” created by the recently-inked debt ceiling compromise, will be tasked with recommending a plan that provides over a trillion dollars in deficit reduction. As you can imagine, pressure is already mounting for the panel to recommend upping the death tax on America’s family businesses and farms (see blog post).
In fact, one way the panel may increase the death tax burden is through stripping away the few tools available for protecting family businesses and farms. Minority discounts, grantor retained annuity trusts (GRATs), and sale transactions are a few of the means by which family business owners and farmers can keep the business or farm intact when the death tax hits.
Stripping away these tools will do severe damage to family businesses and the jobs they create.
The facts show that a better way to increase tax revenues is to repeal the death tax.
As Congress returns home for the August recess, please make sure your Senators and Representative hear this message: A heavier death tax on America’s family business owners, farmers and entrepreneurs isn’t the solution to Washington’s out-of-control spending.
Nearly 170 Representatives have now cosponsored HR 1259, the bipartisan Death Tax Repeal Permanency Act.
Is your Representative among the cosponsors? Visit our HR 1259 tracking page to find out!
Please ask your Representative to cosponsor HR 1259 and reject any “Super Panel” proposal to increase the death tax burden.
Tags: death tax, debt ceiling compromise, deficit reduction, estate tax, legislation, super panel
If you enjoy a quality Napa Valley syrah or cabernet, then you’ll appreciate the story of AFBI friend and vineyard owner Jeff Page.
Napa Valley offered fertile soil to Jeff’s great-grandfather when he started the family farm in the 1880s. The next two generations of Pages cultivated the land and gradually added orchards and livestock holdings of Hereford cattle, sheep, turkeys. The family anticipated leaving the land in the care of succeeding generations…
...until the death tax destroyed their dream.
It’s a story Jeff’s shared with the Napa Valley Register and at a Capitol Hill briefing on repealing the estate tax.
As Jeff tells it, when his grandfather died, the IRS assessed a death tax on the family’s land, livestock, produce, tractors and combines, feed troughs and barns, and everything personal they owned.
The total bill wiped them out. The family was forced to sell off the majority of the farm - even leasing out their home ranch to raise enough cash.
Today, Jeff and his family are carrying on the family tradition on a new (smaller) farm. He is doing everything he can to make sure that the death tax does not take it away – yet again. This includes paying “protection” to his lawyers and estate planners to try to keep the IRS’s wolves at bay.
The Page family, like so many fellow farmers, ranchers and salt-of-the-earth Americans, has had enough of the IRS’s sour grapes. It’s time for Congress to repeal this tax once and for all.
Tags: death tax, death tax horror story, estate tax, family business of the week, family farm, family ranch
<p>When the "Super Committee" Congress created to find at least $1.2 trillion in additional deficit reduction meets, all taxes will be on the table, according to <a href="http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0811/60548.html ">an article in <em>Politico</em></a>. As <a href="http://www.nodeathtax.org/death-tax-and-the-debt-ceiling-">we noted yesterday</a>, the death tax was not touched by the debt ceiling deal, but it is open to change when the Super Committee meets.<br /><br />Again, AFBI recommends that Congress take advantage of the opportunity to <a href="http://www.nodeathtax.org/uploads/view/2502/a_score_of_the_death_tax_repeal_permanency_act.pdf">increase revenues</a> by repealing the estate tax.<br /><br /></p>
Tags: death tax, debt ceiling, estate tax, legislation, super committee, tax revenues
Last night the House passed the Budget Control Act of 2011 (S. 365). In less than an hour the Senate will vote on this legislation. It is expected to pass and the President will sign before midnight tonight.
S. 365 raises the debt ceiling by $2.4 trillion, requires $900 billion in initial spending cuts, and establishes a congressional commission (a "Super Committee") to find additional deficit reduction of at least $1.2 trillion.
The act includes no tax increases.
However, the legislation does implicate the death tax in two ways.
First the budget baseline for the legislation assumes the continuation of current law. That is to say, the calculation used to determine federal revenues is based on a 35% death tax with a $5 million exemption through 2013, which jumps to 55% and a $1 million exemption on January 1, 2013.
Second, the "Super Committee" is authorized to make either spending cuts or tax increases to find at least $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction. A change in estate tax law is a theoretical possibility.
Fortunately, over 160 Members of Congress recognize that the Federal Estate Tax is a bad policy - both for small business owners and for the wider economy.
And the research shows that one of the best ways to reduce the deficit is to repeal the estate tax. In fact, repeal would increase net federal revenues by $89 billion over 10 years, according to a revenue estimate of the Death Tax Repeal Permanency Act.
Tags: budget control act of 2011, death tax, debt ceiling, estate tax, s 365, tax revenue
The Death Tax fight will soon be decided in the halls of Congress by your representatives. AFBI is leading the fight for repeal in Washington, but we cannot do it alone.