Found this on my RSS feed this morning:
http://blogs.chron.com/newswatch/2010/06/houston_billionaires_fortune_t_1.html
Two thoughts:
1. Glad to hear his family will not have to burdened with losing 45% of his hard work to some government fiat.
2. Isn't the democratic Congress supposed to be taxing the rich more these days? I'm confused...
http://blogs.chron.com/newswatch/2010/06/houston_billionaires_fortune_t_1.html
Houston energy magnate Dan Duncan, who died this year, may have become the first U.S. billionaire to pass on his fortune to his heirs tax-free.
Duncan, the richest person in Houston whose worth was estimated at more than $9 billion, according to Forbes, died within a 12-month period that made his fortune not taxable. The New York Times has more:
" ... Had his life ended three months earlier, Mr. Duncan's riches -- Forbes magazine estimated his worth at $9 billion, ranking him as the 74th wealthiest in the world -- would have been subject to a federal tax of at least 45 percent. If he had lived past Jan. 1, 2011, the rate would be even higher -- 55 percent.
Instead, because Congress allowed the tax to lapse for one year and gave all estates a free pass in 2010, Mr. Duncan's four children and four grandchildren stand to collect billions that in any other year would have gone to the Treasury.
Two thoughts:
1. Glad to hear his family will not have to burdened with losing 45% of his hard work to some government fiat.
2. Isn't the democratic Congress supposed to be taxing the rich more these days? I'm confused...