Dude, I want my parents' money. Okay, by the time they die (which will never happen, nosirree) I hope to have plenty of my own, but inheritance has always been a default assumption of western culture, hasn't it? I've inherited from their genes, their minds, their hearts. I figure their pockets can reasonably be mine too.
It doesn't mean I've made it. It just means I'll have it.
Hey -- if I inherit from another country, how would the taxing work?
(Cashmere, I think all this "FEAR ME" crap is a side effect of the Fifth Disease)
Not to revel in your pain, but Fifth Disease. Cracks. Me. Up.
Also, poor you.
I don't actually have to be reasoned or consistent, because I'm just nattering on a posting board.
Do you feel any compulsion to be reasoned or consistent in F2F discussions?
WHAT? This argument means you have to pay BOTH!
No, because the repeal of the estate tax would change the way capital gains are taxed.
Oh yay! Lucy crawled under my bed this morning and I was thinking of you. (My bed has about a foot of clearance, so not such a thing.)
It';s funny, Walter still has the habit of poking his nose out to see if we'll lift up the bed for him, even though he can easily get out on his own. But so much happier.
My thinking on the estate tax is mostly informed by a murder mystery I read (this applies to so much in my life). My understanding is that the basic idea is that the wealth/property/capital should be generating enough revenue to make the tax not much of a burden and if it isn't than the inheritors aren't fit stewards anyway. I kind of like this idea, but I am vaguely pro redistribution of wealth and understand that not everyone is, so I wouldn't argue that the estate tax is absolutely good. I will say that I like it. However, if it is repealed and that increases any net inheritance I may receive, I doubt I will refusing that extra money.
So, on balance, whatever.
Dude, I want my parents' money. Okay, by the time they die (which will never happen, nosirree) I hope to have plenty of my own, but inheritance has always been a default assumption of western culture, hasn't it?
Right, what's the point of building up an estate if you can't pass it along to your children?
I think it kicks in at a million dollars, which I think is too low. But very few people inherit that much as it is.
5. Washington/Baltimore
HA! and may I say again HA! but, they may not be saying that it's the best place for singles to meet people, it may be saying that DC is a good place to be single, which I would not disagree with.
ita, depends on the country, where the will is probated, and, in some cases, the location of the asset.
ita, don't know the details on inheritance. But U.S. federal income tax gives you a credit for taxes paid to foreign countries. Saves me about 10 bucks a year (I have shares in a mutual fund that invests in foreign stocks).
Not to revel in your pain, but Fifth Disease. Cracks. Me. Up.
It's the one bright spot. I never made the connection until tiggy noted it in my LJ. Soon after, I started saying, "FEAR ME" wherever I went, and still not making the connection until this morning.
My knees and feet are now more affected than my hands. Sadly, this makes me walk funny, and I've pulled, or somehow angered a calf muscle, which makes me have to walk funny, which is hurting my heels. My sneakers are in Maine, I think, because the five of us can't find them anywhere. My sandals make my feet worse. /whingey whingey babypants
Right, what's the point of building up an estate if you can't pass it along to your children?
This is how I feel. It just seems wrong. If I've been paying taxes on my money all my life, and managed to invest what I could wisely, well goody for me. That stuff is mine. The money that bought it has already been taxed and I'm a damned broken record. Shutting up, now.