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Note From the Editor: April 2018Note From the Editor: April 2018

Editor in Chief Susan R. Lipp discusses this month's issue.

Susan R. Lipp - Moderator, Editor in Chief

March 22, 2018

2 Min Read
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Now that the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the Act) has doubled the estate, gift and generation-skipping transfer tax exemptions, many estate planners have been confronted by clients who are questioning the need for life insurance. Planners must help clients avoid making rash decisions and be prepared to answer specific questions regarding the value and need for insurance. In their article, “The Ways and Means of Tax Planning With Life Insurance After Tax Reform,” p. 47, based on a presentation that they gave at the 2018 Heckerling Institute on Estate Planning in Orlando, Fla., Charles L. Ratner and Lawrence Brody review some difficult questions planners may now face and provide some suggestions for how to answer them. Robert W. Finnegan also grapples with the future of life insurance in light of the increased exemption amounts in his article, “Planning With Life Insurance in Uncertain Times,” p. 54. Pointing out that the increased exemption amounts represent a “Golden Age of estate planning,” he explains that delaying planning isn’t wise and proposes a more holistic approach that focuses on a client’s financial security. Rounding out our Committee Report on Insurance is an article on an adaptable split-dollar technique—called the “switch dollar”—as an efficient way of funding a trust-owned life insurance policy.    

The Act also affects clients with disabilities by making important enhancements to the provisions regarding Achieving a Better Life Experience (ABLE) accounts. ABLE accounts provide qualifying disabled individuals with an opportunity to save for their qualified disability expenses on a tax-favored basis. The new provisions are outlined in “ABLE After the 2017 Tax Act,” p. 17, by James W.C. Canup.    

In his “Tips From the Pros” column, p. 10, Turney P. Berry offers a positive spin on the Act and picks up on the “Golden Age of estate planning” theme. He concludes that the Act ushers in this Golden Age by offering the “hook” of increased income tax basis. 

 

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.