The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Inheritanc­e Tax should be abolished – but we can help

- BILL SAUNDERS, CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER, ACUMEN FINANCIAL PLANNING Bill Saunders is a Certified Financial Planner at Acumen Financial Planning.

There, I’ve said it. No doubt there will be some people up in arms at the very concept of abolishing a tax which only affects very rich people (except it doesn’t), but please, allow me to explain my rationale.

To start with, Inheritanc­e Tax (IHT) in percentage terms raises a miniscule amount of money for the UK Government. According to the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity, it amounts to 0.7% of tax receipts and represents just 0.3% of national income.

It’s small beer, and it’s wrong on so many levels. My number one objection is that it is effectivel­y double taxation. Assets accumulate­d over a lifetime have largely come out of taxed income – in other words, the government has already had a significan­t slice. Then, because you have died, after some allowances, there is another 40% to pay. And

it’s not as if it’s an event we have any control over.

Countries around the world have varying attitudes and thresholds for applying Inheritanc­e Tax or its equivalent. In the UK, after the first £325,000, 40% is charged on the balance. In many European countries the threshold is less than that, yet in the US, the official estate and gift exclusion before tax becomes due is $12.92 million in 2023. In New Zealand, Canada, Mexico and Portugal there is no Inheritanc­e Tax. Australia abolished it in 1979.

It is a myth that IHT

only affects wealthy people. By August 2022, the average price of a house in the UK had reached £298,000, meaning that a single Mr or Ms Average living alone in that average priced house would need to have just £27,000 of savings or other assets before the government came looking for their 40%. Yes, there are other exemptions such as the Resident Nil Rate Band which applies if the home is passed on to direct dependants, but my point is that you don’t need to be super rich for your family to be affected by IHT.

In fact, being super rich when thinking about who gets clobbered most by IHT is dead handy. According to the OECD the richest 0.01% of the world’s population own 50% of the assets squirrelle­d away in taxfree offshore havens. Also, Mr or Ms Average in the above example may not own agricultur­al land or a business, for which there are generous tax reliefs from IHT – these cost the government about £600 million every year. As a result, it is estimated that estates worth more than £10 million are often paying an effective rate of

IHT of around 10%, which is half the rate of those with assets of £2 to £3 million. There is nothing fair about that.

However, we are where we are and in the current political and economic environmen­t it is almost inevitable that we will be stuck with IHT in the UK for the foreseeabl­e future. The good news is that there are a number establishe­d and perfectly legal ways that families of average wealth can drasticall­y reduce the amount of Inheritanc­e Tax their families will need to pay.

Perhaps the number one strategy is to give money away during your lifetime and then make sure you live for seven years after that, at which time, the gift will be deemed to be outside your estate for IHT purposes. This seven-year “clock” can be accelerate­d to two years if investing in certain assets. You are also able to give money away but still benefit from an “income” from the money you gifted if set up as certain types of trust.

You can also make unlimited gifts out of income which are not subject to a seven or twoyear clock, if certain conditions are met. In addition, there are potential solutions for the family home, should that be the biggest contributo­r to IHT exposure.

Of course, giving money away during one’s lifetime is not always an enticing prospect and frankly can be a little scary without being 100% confident that it can be done without affecting one’s own standard of living, now or at any time in the future – this is where lifetime cashflow modelling can come into its own.

Acumen Financial Planning is able to help with all of the above – if you would like an initial discussion, even if it is just to tell us about your own views on whether Inheritanc­e Tax is a good or bad thing, don’t hesitate to get in touch.

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 ?? ?? DOUBLE TAXATION: Assets accumulate­d over a lifetime will by and large have been taxed already, and to add insult to injury the government wants to tax you again if you exceed the Inheritanc­e Tax threshold.
DOUBLE TAXATION: Assets accumulate­d over a lifetime will by and large have been taxed already, and to add insult to injury the government wants to tax you again if you exceed the Inheritanc­e Tax threshold.

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