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Recent Articles & Treatises
- Registration now open for September 17, 2019 CPE Seminar, “IRC Sec. 199A: Wasn’t the Code to be Simplified?” August 26, 2019
- A Journey Through IRC Section 199A: Wasn’t the Code to be Simplified? July 25, 2019
- Tax News & Comment — August 2019 July 25, 2019
- Tax News & Comment – April 2017 March 13, 2017
- Tax News & Comment — May 2016 May 14, 2016
- FROM WASHINGTON & ALBANY — Current Election Probabilities; Tax Plans of Trump and Clinton May 13, 2016
- FROM FEDERAL AND NYS COURTS: Recent Developments & 2015 Decisions of Note May 13, 2016
- IRS & NYS DTF MATTERS: Recent Developments & 2015 Regs. & Rulings of Note May 13, 2016
- Creating and Maintaining Flexibility in Wills and Trusts May 13, 2016
- Escaping the Quandary Posed by Unreported Foreign Accounts May 13, 2016
- Like Kind Exchanges Alive and Well: An Update May 13, 2016
Most Popular
- Executor and Trustee Commissions Under NY EPTL
- Legal Basis for Seeking Abatement of New York State Tax Penalties
- Depreciation Recapture
- Use of Disclaimers in Pre and Post-Mortem Estate Planning
- Letters Testamentary
- Taxation of Foreign Nongrantor Trusts: Throwback Rule
- Valuation Discounts for LLCs
- Defeating The Right of Election in EPTL § 5-1.1-A
- Split Interest Trusts
- Executor and Trustee Commissions Under the New York EPTL
Planning for Capital Asset Status
The maximum effective marginal tax rate for individuals can now reach 41.4 percent (after limitations on itemized deductions and phase-out personal exemptions). By contrast, the long-term capital gains tax rate for noncorporate taxpayers is 20 percent (25 percent on unrecaptured § 1250 gain). For corporate taxpayers, ordinary income and long-term capital gains are taxed at 35 percent. From a rate perspective, it is therefore desirable, where possible, to structure individual business transactions so that capital asset status will be accorded. Continue reading →