Tax-Free Inheritances Fuel America’s New $73 Trillion Gilded Age

Americans can expect to inherit $72.6 trillion over the next quarter century, more than twice as much as a decade ago, in the latest indication of how soaring markets are poised to bolster the next generation of the ultra-rich.

Almost half of all U.S. wealth transferred from the end of 2020 through 2045 will come from the top 1.5% of households, according to estimates from research firm Cerulli. Using trusts and other techniques, the wealthiest Americans can shield the bulk of their fortunes from the federal government’s 40% estate and gift tax levy. President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress have so far failed in efforts to plug such loopholes and otherwise boost inheritance taxes.

The growth in dynastic fortunes has become a flash point in Washington, with the advocacy group Americans for Tax Fairness warning in a report released Wednesday about the “return to Gilded Age levels of wealth concentration.” The 2017 Republican tax overhaul, which included a doubling of the amount the wealthy can pass to heirs without triggering the estate tax, caused revenue collected from the levy to plunge by more than half in the span of two years, with just 1,275 families paying $9.3 billion in 2020, according to Internal Revenue Service data.

“It’s easier to pass on wealth without facing as much taxation as even a decade ago,” said Chayce Horton, one of the authors of the Cerulli report. Trusts “are becoming increasingly popular over the last five to ten years as high-net-worth wealth has ballooned.”

Of the advisers surveyed by Cerulli, 93% cited trust strategies, with the most popular being grantor trusts. That category includes grantor-retained annuity trusts, or GRATs, used by Nike Inc. founder Philip Knight and the family of Walmart Inc. founder Sam Walton. Grantor trusts exploit a long-standing loophole that House Democrats had proposed closing before the provision was deleted from the Build Back Better package.