Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,067
Interesting idea to cap the dwelling house exemption. Intuitively €750k seems a bit on the high side to me - would €400k not suffice?
Maybe make an exemption for the family home — but limit that exemption to €200,000.
It's worth bearing in mind that any trading business and its employees/owners will, hopefully, continue to generate tax revenue into the future.
O.K., we are getting somewhere.
My article said:
To me the principle is clear. There should not be a unlimited means of transferring wealth though buying a home for someone which they have to live in for only 3 years.
I am not sure of the relevance of this. I am not saying that a business must be closed down on the death of its owner.
I am simply saying that the the person who inherits it, should pay 33% (or more) of the value of the business in Capital Acquisitions Tax. If it's a profitable business, it will generate the profits to repay such a loan. If it's a loss-making business, then it won't be very valuable and won't generate a big CAT bill.
And, I would have no objections to putting in safeguards to avoid a heavy cash flow hit on the business. For example, the payment could be deferred. Interest would accumulate on the bill. Again, it's the principle. It's not right that I can receive a business worth €10m and pay around 3% tax on it.
Brendan
Lets use this example for a dairy farmer with 500 acres milking 500 cows. based on current milk prices this farm would produce an annual profit of c€200K. The value of land alone would be worth c5mln. Farmer dies and leaves the farm to his son. Brendan would like to input a CAT of 30% on this transfer. I.e a tax bill of 1.5mln. farm is probably already carrying a level of borrowings to meet the significant infrastructure costs of running this operation (updated milking machinery, housing etc). So the son will be forced to sell 30% of the farmland to pay the CAT bill, thus reducing the earnings capacity of the farm by a similar amount and in all probability significantly effecting the capacity of the business to service existing & future borrowings.If they own a €10m business, they are probably taking €1m a year out of it in profits. €500k after tax. They could easily afford to repay a mortgage of €3m over time. They would still be getting an asset worth €10m for €3m.
It is crazy that the marginal rate of tax for the nurse is the same as for the consultant.
It is also crazy that, for the purposes of inheritance tax exemption, there is no upper limit on the value of the house in which the son or daughter is living.
Lets use this example for a dairy farmer with 500 acres milking 500 cows.
I agree that there is a good argument in favour of inheritance tax but it must be constructed less emotively.
Take the example of a disabled adult child who is not employable and has lived his whole life in his parent's house in, say, Dalkey. Would it be appropriate to require that child to sell his dwelling house on inheriting same and to move elsewhere simply because he happens to live in what has become a very valuable property?
There is a good chance that a disabled person who inherits a large house which he has inhabited with his parents, will probably move to a more suitable house anyway. So I don't really see a big problem with this.
If people want to make some exception for these cases, fair enough. Personally I wouldn't, but as these would be rare enough, I would have no problem.
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