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Warren Buffett, Robber Baron? (The Sage of Omaha and the estate tax racket... HE PROFITS FROM DEATH)
American Thinker ^ | 12/07/2010 | Christopher Chantrill

Posted on 12/07/2010 7:09:54 AM PST by SeekAndFind

I know that we are all supposed to love Warren Buffett as the Sage of Omaha, businessman and all-around good guy, but I keep reading stories that make me wonder. Here's a story about Warren Buffett, the estate tax, and the life insurance industry.

Did you know that the life insurance lobby is actively lobbying to restore the estate tax? 

Why would the life insurance industry care about that? It turns out that ten percent of life insurance industry revenue is related to the estate tax. Wealthy people take out life insurance in order to reduce estate taxes because when you die, your life insurance payout doesn't count as part of your estate.

Did you know that Warren Buffett owns six life insurance companies? Did you know he supports the estate tax? You do now.

Warren Buffett isn't just noted as an owner of life insurance companies and a supporter of the estate tax. He's also noted as a buyer of family businesses. As Dick Patten shows, these two business strategies support each other.

A family business owner or farmer takes out a large life insurance policy which he sinks tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars into each year. When he finally passes away, the life insurance pays out his policy to his family--tax free...

Even as Mr. Buffett's insurance companies are "protecting" family businesses from the IRS, he is buying companies that are forced to sell themselves to pay the death tax. Mr. Buffett's ability to buy family businesses at bargain basement prices depends on families being desperate to sell-and nothing produces family businesses desperate to sell quickly like a 55% bill from the IRS on all of the businesses' assets. 

Estate taxes must be paid to the U.S. Treasury within a year of the testator's death. In cash.

Back in 1931, the liberal son of an immigrant banker knew what to call this kind of business. Matthew Josephson wrote The Robber Barons to argue that the industrial giants of the 19th century had not created wealth in the right way. They had acted like the feudal barons who for centuries had dominated the mountain passes through the Alps. The great corporations of the Gilded Age "monopolized strategic valley roads or mountain passes through which commerce flowed" just like the old barons-of-the-crags. 

Hello, Warren? Isn't your business model exactly the one that so offended young Matthew back in the Great Depression after he got back from a decade living la vie bohème as an ex-pat in Paris? Aren't your businesses sitting at an economic choke-point, exploiting the unintended consequences of bad government economic policy, gouging successful family businesses both coming and going, and exploiting grieving widows?

Matthew Josephson inaugurated the arch, knowing style that liberal John Kenneth Galbraith picked up in the 1950s and that Noam Chomsky does so well today. These writers all appeal to the liberal reader who wants to believe that America is unjust and crude but who doesn't want to be enlightened much by actual knowledge about business and the economy. 

That's OK. Let our liberal friends spin their fantasies of conspiratorial robber barons and corporate greed. We have Hernando De Soto with The Other Path and The Mystery of Capital. He shows us how the real robber barons are the leaders of "redistributive combines" of special interests competing for privileges from favor-dispensing politicians and bureaucrats.

And now we have Deirdre McCloskey and her bubbly, one-of-the-girls style. In The Bourgeois Virtues, she argues that whether you like capitalism or not, there are now six times as many humans living today as in 1800, and the average living human consumes eight and a half times as much as people consumed two hundred years ago. Plus capitalism has made us "ethically better people," whereas socialism does the opposite. 

It's hard to think of Warren Buffett as a robber baron. He's a jolly chap who just seems to be along for the ride. But the ugly truth is that his businesses benefit from one of the major big-government redistributive programs by which the ruling class makes government big and families small. He's a leader of a "redistributive combine" that wants to keep what it got from the government favor factory. He's one of the chaps sitting by the side of the road taking their cut, courtesy of Uncle Sam.

It would be nice if our liberal friends would be as hard on their green-energy crony capitalists and their high-speed rail robber barons as they would like to be on the white working-class striver trying to buy a small construction business.

But at least Warren Buffett is a nice robber baron. We all like life insurance companies. They are different from health insurance companies.

Christopher Chantrill is a frequent contributor to American Thinker. See his usgovernmentspending.com and also usgovernmentdebt.us. At americanmanifesto.org he is blogging and writing An American Manifesto: Life After Liberalism.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: buffett; deathtax; estatetax; insurance; keystonexl; lifeinsurance; tax; taxes; warrenbuffet; warrenbuffett

1 posted on 12/07/2010 7:09:58 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Warren Buffett and George Soros have more in common than not.


2 posted on 12/07/2010 7:23:07 AM PST by US Navy Vet
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To: SeekAndFind
This explains quite a lot. It never made sense to me why a man like Buffet, the ultimate capitalist, would support an out and out Marxist. This explains a lot. Reading his writings, his rise depended on his ability to spot undervalued businesses and buy them up and hold them.

He also has armies of accountants and lawyers to exploit every tax shelter imaginable, plus he has the ear of the regime so can have loopholes put into the code as he needs them. Not so much for the rest of us. Lately Buffet, who I always admired, is sounding more and more like Soros.

3 posted on 12/07/2010 7:30:45 AM PST by YankeeReb
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To: US Navy Vet

Soros is more a speculator and a political activist.

Buffet ? Not sure about that.

But hey, the insurance business makes lots of money from the existence of the death tax. We should not be surprised that Warren Buffet supports the retention of the tax.


4 posted on 12/07/2010 7:32:25 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
WRONG:

Life Insurance figuers into the calculation to determine Gross Estate, so it is subject to Federal Estate Tax. However, wealthy people buy life insurance so there is Cash available at death to pay the federal Estate Tax. No doubt without the Federal Estate Tax less life insurance, especially the hugh amounts, would be sold.

5 posted on 12/07/2010 7:35:12 AM PST by cynicalman
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To: SeekAndFind

Good old Uncle Warren has made his billions but he doesn’t want you to make yours. He is as bad as any of these other uber billionaires.


6 posted on 12/07/2010 7:36:32 AM PST by Georgia Girl 2
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To: SeekAndFind
I have no problem with the general concept of an "estate tax." I don't, however, support it as a stand-alone tax at all -- especially one with such an exorbitant rate.

If I had my way, I'd apply the estate tax as a modified version of the capital gains tax. If a person dies and leaves $X in assets to his/her heirs, then this is documented no differently than a capital gains transaction -- whereby it effectively constitutes a "sale" of an asset from the deceased to the heirs, and the estate of the deceased is taxed based on the capital gain or loss.

Because the timing of a person's death is largely unpredictable (though it is becoming less so over time), there would need to be considerations built into the estate tax process that avoids the financial chaos that would likely ensue if the estate ends up facing an enormous tax bill that would require the sale of illiquid assets like real estate in order to pay the tax. Maybe an option to pay a slightly higher capital gains tax rate in exchange for the ability to pay the tax over an extended period of time (maybe as long as ten years) would be fair and equitable.

7 posted on 12/07/2010 7:39:01 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("If you touch my junk, I'm gonna have you arrested.")
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To: cynicalman
Life Insurance figuers into the calculation to determine Gross Estate, so it is subject to Federal Estate Tax.

Are you sure about this? If someone dies and they have a $2 million life insurance policy, there is a named beneficiary for that policy. Doesn't the $2 million get paid directly to the beneficiary? If that's the case, then how can it be included in the estate of the deceased?

You're right on target about the need for life insurance to provide cash pay the estate tax.

8 posted on 12/07/2010 7:42:57 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("If you touch my junk, I'm gonna have you arrested.")
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To: SeekAndFind; Ellendra

Thanks. I think my daughter might be interested in this one.


9 posted on 12/07/2010 7:44:27 AM PST by knittnmom (Save the earth! It's the only planet with chocolate!)
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To: SeekAndFind

I’m tired of Buffett’s “country cousin” PR bullsh*t.


10 posted on 12/07/2010 7:45:15 AM PST by PGR88
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To: Alberta's Child
Life Insurance figuers into the calculation to determine Gross Estate, so it is subject to Federal Estate Tax.

Are you sure about this? If someone dies and they have a $2 million life insurance policy, there is a named beneficiary for that policy. Doesn't the $2 million get paid directly to the beneficiary? If that's the case, then how can it be included in the estate of the deceased?

Yes, I am sure. But don't forget you now need a estate in excess of 5 million. For the very wealthy the life insurance is not paid to individuals but to a Trust that pay the tax

However there are ways to take the life insurance out of your estate for federal estate tax purposes. Many create an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust. The Trust owns the policy and provided you jump thru the right hoops it is not calculated into ones Gross Estate.

11 posted on 12/07/2010 7:49:55 AM PST by cynicalman
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To: SeekAndFind
It makes sense that Buffett is swiping the pennies from dead men's eyes through the death tax. He crossed that ethical Rubicon so long ago.

His $4 billion Buffett Foundation donates millions of dollars per year to Planned Parenthood chapters and abortion lobbyists such as the National Abortion Federation—whose members are abortionists and "clinics."

He's a long-time contributor to UN population-control campaigns—whose purpose is to eliminate poor folks in the Third World, which incidentally profits American and Western European foundations and pharmaceutical vendors.

12 posted on 12/07/2010 7:50:48 AM PST by SamuraiScot
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To: SamuraiScot

Lets close the life insurance loop hole, Warren. Another way Warren get his money, in the earlier days when familes had to sell their business to pay estate taxes.


13 posted on 12/07/2010 8:08:27 AM PST by scooby321
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To: SeekAndFind

bttt


14 posted on 12/07/2010 8:29:28 AM PST by RebelTex (FREEDOM IS EVERYONE'S RIGHT! AND EVERYONE'S RESPONSIBILITY!)
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To: SeekAndFind

I just added up everything, and wouldn’t you know it that I will be subject to the estate tax.

I am not rich by any means but when I die my heirs are going to be creamed.

Current projected assets at my death is in excess of 1.5M dollars.

The Death Tax sucks!


15 posted on 12/09/2010 9:13:33 PM PST by dila813
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To: cynicalman

The 5M is only if the tax deal goes through, it is 1M if it doesn’t if I read this right.

http://legallyeasy.rocketlawyer.com/federal-estate-tax-law-change-bush-tax-cut-extension-9575


16 posted on 12/09/2010 9:17:46 PM PST by dila813
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