Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
Garver Farm Market wins zoning appeal to keep ag designation
House Ag’s Brown calls on Trump to intercede to assist farmers
Next Gen Conferences help FFA members define goals 
KDA’s All in for Ag Education Week features student-created book
School zone pesticide bill being fine-tuned in Illinois
Kentucky Hay Testing Lab helps farmers verify forage quality
Kentucky farmer turns one-time tobacco plot into gourd patch
Look at field residue as treasure rather than as trash to get rid of
Kentucky farm wins prestigious environmental stewardship award
Beekeeping Boot Camp offers hands-on learning
Kentucky debuts ‘Friends of Agriculture’ license plate
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   

Newspaper: Impact of Ohio’s estate tax repeal ‘disastrous’

The Blade

Toledo, Ohio

April 20, 2015

Ohio’s repeal of its estate tax more than two years ago has had a disastrous impact on local communities that relied on revenue from the tax to pay for essential public services.

Now, Republicans in Congress want to repeal the federal estate tax – a giveaway that would hand $270 billion in tax breaks to millionaires and billionaires during the next decade – even as they claim to care about rising wealth inequality.

The measure, which the House passed earlier this month, is unlikely to gain approval in the Senate, and certainly not from President Obama. But it reflects the extreme anti-tax agenda that has come to characterize the GOP.

Opponents of the estate tax like to claim that they represent the interests of struggling small businesses, even though virtually no small-business owners pay the tax. It affects only individuals who inherit estates worth $5.43 million, or married couples who inherit $10.86 million – the richest 0.2 percent of Americans.

Opponents call it a "death tax" that punishes heirs for the hard work of their family members. But such cynical labels misstate the roles of the tax: to limit the concentration of wealth and power in the hands of a few, and to require wealthy Americans to pay a fair share of taxes on fortunes they did not earn.

These proposals are unlikely to go anywhere soon. But lawmakers must preserve the few antidotes to inequality that exist – and leave the estate tax alone.

4/29/2015