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Philanthropy & the Estate Tax

Louis Uchitelle, Lure of Great Wealth Affects Career Choices, NY Times, Nov. 27, 2006, explains how changes in the estate tax rate impact spending and career choices as follows:

In an earlier Gilded Age, Andrew Carnegie argued that talented managers who accumulate great wealth were morally obligated to redistribute their wealth through philanthropy. The estate tax and the progressive income tax later took over most of that function — imposing tax rates of more than 70 percent as recently as 1980 on incomes above a certain level.

Now, with this marginal rate at half that much and the estate tax fading in importance, many of the new rich engage in the conspicuous consumption that their wealth allows. Others, while certainly not stinting on comfort, are embracing philanthropy as an alternative to a life of professional accomplishment.

Special thanks to Prof. Joel C. Dobris of the University of California– Davis for bringing this article to my attention.

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