Gifting. Beginning in 2003, you can give up to $11,000 to each individual or charitable organization in a year without paying gift taxes. (The recipient does not pay taxes on the yearly limit of $11,000.) There is no yearly limit for qualified educational expenses. Gifting lowers the value of your estate and distributes your wealth while you are living. Gifts made to charitable organizations may be tax-deductible, but gifts to your heirs are not tax-deductible.
Unified tax credit. The unified credit is a cumulative tax credit. If you give more than $11,000 to an individual or charitable in a year, taxes owed on amounts that exceed the $11,000 per-person limit are subtracted from your unified credit. To record gifts in excess of the yearly limit, complete IRS Form 709, which is the sister of Form 706. (Form 706 is for estate tax and Form 709 is for gift tax.)
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Wait until the war between Israel and the terrorist in Lebanon stops. Who do you think will be paying to bebuild these two countries. I would bet the good old USA. The government spending has to slow down, taxes are high enough.
I have read somewhere(can't seem to find it now) that super wealthy families like the Kennedy's pay little if any "death taxes" because their money is in tax havens off-shore. I can't state this as a fact, but it wouldn't surprise me.