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More Support for Saving the Basis Step-UpMore Support for Saving the Basis Step-Up

Former Sen. Max Baucus warns of risks to family-owned farms and businesses.

Susan R. Lipp - Moderator, Editor in Chief

September 8, 2021

2 Min Read
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Roger Hutchings/Corbis Historical/Getty Images

Estate planners have been keeping their eyes on one of the more controversial tax proposals of the Biden administration: eliminating the step-up in basis on death.

The basis step-up reduces or eliminates the capital gains the decedent’s heirs will need to pay on certain assets.

In a recent op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, former Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.) expressed his support of saving the step-up. Baucus, who once chaired the Finance Committee, noted that family-owned farms and businesses have faced many challenges over the past year due to the global pandemic and difficulty finding employees in the labor market. He opined that eliminating the step-up in basis would just add to those challenges. He noted that in 1976 and 2010, Congress passed legislation eliminating the step-up in basis, and, both times, it had to be reinstated because of the devastating effects on family-owned businesses. 

“Senator Baucus made one thing clear—the Biden administration is failing to sell its plan,” says James Dougherty of Dungey Dougherty PLLC in Greenwich, Conn. According to Dougherty, Republicans have always argued that the “death tax” destroys family farms and businesses. The common theme used to sell Biden’s tax plans on individuals is that no one needs to worry about higher taxes because they won’t apply (raising the question of who’s actually paying them) and closing what he calls loopholes (such as the basis step-up). The president must convince members of his party who come from states like former Sen. Baucus (such as current Montana Sen. Jon Tester) that their constituents will believe the elimination of the basis step-up won’t impact them. Dougherty says that the fact that Biden’s proposal explicitly defers the recognition of gain on family farms and businesses from until they’re sold but is still meeting these accusations from members of his own party is indicative of this being seen as the “Biden death tax” instead of closing a loophole.

Related:Are Retroactive Stepped-Up Income Tax Basis Proposals Constitutional?

Determining the Cost Basis

Another concern with basing capital gains on a basis that isn’t stepped-up on death, not mentioned by Sen. Baucus, is figuring out just what that basis is, notes Al W. King III, co-founder of South Dakota Trust Company. The decedent will most likely be the best source of the information but obviously will have no way to relate it unless séances come back into vogue. King notes that some assets are very old, and many years may have passed with many basis adjustments, making it difficult to figure out the correct basis.

Related:Senate Democrats Are Coming for Stepped-Up Basis at Death

About the Author

Susan R. Lipp - Moderator

Editor in Chief, Trusts & Estates Magazine

Susan R. Lipp is editor in chief of Trusts & Estates magazine, the WealthManagement.com Journal for estate-planning professionals. She oversees both the print and online version of T & E, as well as the monthly e-newsletter articles.
Susan served in leadership positions at Vendome Group, LLC (formerly Brownstone Publishers, Inc.) with editorial responsibility for publications and newsletters. Following her tenure at Vendome Group, Susan joined Community Housing Improvement Program (CHIP) as General Counsel, where she was editor in chief of its monthly newsletter and implemented initiatives to educate members on legal requirements. Susan began her career at Rosenberg and Estis, P.C., a real estate law firm in New York City.
Susan holds a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from Brandeis University. She received her Juris Doctor Law degree from Hofstra University School of Law, graduating with distinction and having served as Associate Editor of the Law Review. Susan is admitted to practice law in New York State and is a member of the New York State Bar Association.