Estate Tax Odyssey - Part 2

As we are approaching the last quarter of 2009 and 2010 is just a few months away, I expect to hear more and more comments about estate tax and its fate in 2010 and beyond. As I commented in my previous post , the estate tax is currently set to disappear in 2010 and then re-emerge in 2011 at pre-George W. Bush rates, with a 55% tax on the portion of an estate over $1 million.

Just today, in WSJ, Jonathan Weisman wrote an article entitled "Estate Tax Faces Its Own Life-and-Death Struggle", highlighting how the current political climate and political parties might be dealing with a tax set to disappear in 2010 and the expectation of additional tax law changes in 2011.

As mentioned in the article, the debate over healthcare has pushed discussions about estate tax issue to a second tier level, but what I found interesting is that central players on the estate-tax policy also have key roles in the healthcare debate. As it stands now, President Obama has proposed permanently locking in the estate tax at the current 45% with a $3.5 million exclusion but some might worry (as stated in the article) that some politicians might block any action in 2010 to ensure the tax will return in 2011 at the 55% rate with a $1 million exclusion. 

Also the stock market fluctuations and deep declines in real estate values may let politicians have a different view on where to tax estates since a dollar today arguably goes further (at least in reference to real estate) then it did a couple of years ago.

So how might all this affect you, if the laws remain unchanged:

·         In 2011, more estates will have to pay the estate tax since the exclusion drops from $3.5 million to $1 million.

I am sure we will hear more about this issue, so stay tuned…

Social Networking, Blogs and Seniors

Many of my clients frequently comment how they first found me online, such as through my blog.  Some of them related to my posts, so much so, that they felt they knew me before even meeting me in person.  
 
So when I stumbled upon the recent post from Home Care Palm Springs about Why Are Seniors Social Networking?, I was not surprised.  After all my mom (who is a senior), has been active online for over a decade.  She even met her husband online -- very progressive of her, if I may add. The post mentioned 5 reasons why seniors enjoy social networking, one of them being "bridging the generational gap" which might explain the popularity of Facebook and My Space.  On Facebook you can find teens, parents and grandparents all connected regardless how far away they are from each other.  Just yesterday, the CEO of Facebook Mark  Zuckerberg reported on his Facebook Blog that Facebook now serves 300 million people across the globe.  And that number will surely rise.
 
Back in February, Inside Facebook, an independent blog that covers Facebook activity, reported the number of women over 55 who use the site had grown by 175.3 percent since September 2008. (Male users in that age group increased by 137.8 percent.)  Additionally, Facebook’s advertising site estimates that there are now more than 4 million users between the ages of 45 and 65 in the United States alone.  Some sites, like Eons (similar to Facebook in style and purpose), are solely for boomers.
 
Recently I heard a great explanation of social networking from Steve Love, a local real estate agent.  He said that social networking is like a big cocktail party.  People who enjoy it & benefit from it, treat it as such.  I certainly agree.   
 
What do you think?   Do you use social networking? Do you like it?  Have you met new people, made new friends? I am curious to hear all the good, the bad and the ugly...let me know.
 
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