Order Code 95-444 A
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
A History of Federal Estate, Gift, and
Generation-Skipping Taxes
Updated January 7, 2004
John R. Luckey
Legislative Attorney
American Law Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

A History of Federal Estate, Gift, and
Generation-Skipping Taxes
Summary
Since 1976, the federal transfer tax system has included an estate tax, gift tax,
and generation-skipping tax. The estate and gift transfer taxes have been part of the
federal revenue system, off and on, since the earliest days of the United States. With
the enactment of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001
(P.L. 107-16), we are entering the first off period since 1916. This Act phases out
the estate and generation-skipping taxes over a ten year period, leaving the gift tax
as the only federal transfer tax. It must be kept in mind that the repeal of the estate
and generation-skipping taxes is not permanent. Unless revised, these taxes are to be
reinstated in 2011.
There are three primary types of proposed legislation in this area in the 108th
Congress. One type would make the repeal permanent (H.R. 8, H.R. 57, H.R. 139,
and H.R. 158 would make the repeal of these taxes permanent. H.R. 210, H.R. 407,
and H.R. 1612 would make all provisions of P.L. 107-16 permanent). Another would
accelerate the repeal of these transfer taxes (H.R. 51, S. 13, S. 96 and S. 169). The
third would reinstate these taxes at lower rates in a manner more considerate of
family owned business (H.R. 396, H.R. 2477, H.R. 2480, H.R. 2481, H.R. 2502,
H.R. 2513, H.R. 2532, H.R. 2610, H.R. 2682, S. 34, and S. 135). H.R. 8 was passed
in the House on June 18, 2003.
In this report, the history of the federal transfer taxes, has been divided into four
parts: (1) the federal death and gift taxes utilized in the period 1789 to 1915; (2) the
development of the modern estate and gift taxes from 1916 through 1975; (3) the
creation and refinement of a unified estate and gift tax system, supplemented by a
generation-skipping transfer tax; and (4) the phase out and repeal of the estate and
generation-skipping taxes, with the gift tax being retained as a device to protect the
integrity of the income tax.

Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Death and Gift Taxes in the United States:
1789-1915 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
The Death Stamp Tax: 1789-1802 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
The Civil War Inheritance Taxes: 1862-1870 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
An Income Tax on Gifts and Inheritance: 1894 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Modified Estate Tax: 1898-1902 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Reasons for Federal Death Taxes: 1789-1915 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Development of the Modern Federal Estate and Gift Taxes: 1916-1975 . . . . . . . 6
The Revenue Act of 1916 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Rate Increases: 1917 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Estate Tax Fluctuations and a Brief Gift Tax: 1918-1926 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Estate Tax Rate Increases and a Permanent Gift Tax: 1932-1941 . . . . . . . . . 9
Further Rate Adjustments and the Marital Deduction: 1942-1948 . . . . . . . 10
Changes in the Estate Taxation of Life Insurance: 1954 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Restructuring of the Federal Transfer Tax System: 1976—1998 . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
The Tax Reform Act of 1976 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
The Revenue Act of 1978 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
The Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act of 1980 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
The Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
The Technical and Miscellaneous Revenue Act of 1988 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
The Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1989 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
The Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1990 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
The Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1993 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
The Taxpayer Protection Act of 1997 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
The Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 . . . . 25
Phase Out and Repeal the Federal Estate and Generation-Skipping Taxes . . . . 25
Repeal of The Estate and Generation-Skipping Transfer Taxes . . . . . . . . . 26
Phase Out of The Estate and Generation-Skipping Transfer Taxes . . . . . . . 26
Modification of The Gift Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Basis Rules for Property Received from a Decedent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Other Amendments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

A History of Federal Estate, Gift, and
Generation-Skipping Taxes
Introduction
The concept of a death tax and the controversies surrounding such taxes have
ancient roots. There is evidence of a 10 percent tax on transfers of property at death
in ancient Egypt, as early as 700 B.C.1 Later, the Greeks and Romans adopted death
taxes. Critics of such taxes may trace their grievances at least to Pliny the Younger,
who charged that a death tax was “an unnatural tax augmenting the grief and sorrow
of the bereaved.”2
The gift tax has developed as a necessary concomitant to the death tax because
the easiest way to escape a tax on the gratuitous transfer of property at death is to
divest oneself of the property during life. The impact of either tax alone would be
diminished by the escape offered by the alternate transfer.3
Starting in 1976, States Congress almost completely restructured the federal
transfer tax system. The estate and gift taxes were unified. The scope of these taxes
was changed in terms of size of estates affected. Perceived loopholes of major
importance were closed or narrowed. Certain groups, previously thought to have
suffered excessive tax burdens, were afforded relief. A new tax, the generation-
skipping transfer tax, was added to supplement these two other transfer taxes.
1 Randolph E. Paul, Federal Estate and Gift Taxation, p. 3 (Boston 1942), William J.
Schultz, The Taxation of Inheritance, p. 3 (New York, 1926); and Max West, The
Inheritance Tax
, p. 11 (New York, 1908). See also, Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U.S. 41, 49
(1900).
2 William J. Schultz, The Taxation of Inheritance, p. 6 (New York 1926). The Roman death
taxes were adopted by Emperor Augustus in 6 A.D. See also, Max West, The Inheritance
Tax
, p. 11 (New York, 1908); and 3 Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, p. 311 (London,
1811). For a discussion of the complexities of estate planning in ancient Greece, see, Anton-
Herman Chroust, Estate Planning in Hellenic Antiquity: Aristotle’s Last Will and
Testament,
45 Notre Dame Lawyer 629 (1969).
3 The history of using inter vivos transfers to evade death taxes may be traced to Egypt in
the seventh century, B.C.. As noted by one author:
“Another inscription [Egyptian hieroglyphics] records a sale of property by an
old man to his sons at a nominal price, apparently for the purpose of avoiding the
inheritance tax.”
Max West, The Inheritance Tax, pp. 11-12 (New York, 1908).

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The enactment of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of
2001,4 begins a movement away from the use of transfer taxes. This Act phases out
the estate and generation-skipping taxes over a ten year period, leaving the gift tax
as the only federal transfer tax. The repeal of the estate tax would leave the United
States without a federal estate tax for the first time since 1916.
This report details the history of the three federal transfer taxes, tracing their
development from their eighteenth century roots to the present.5
Death and Gift Taxes in the United States:
1789-1915
Prior to 1916, the United States did not make regular use of death and gift taxes.
The federal government turned to them only in time of extraordinary revenue
demands, such as wartime, although individual states used them extensively.
The Death Stamp Tax: 1789-1802
The federal experience with death taxes began in the eighteenth century, when
strained trade relations with France necessitated development of a strong naval force.
In 1794, a special revenue committee of the House of Representatives recommended
that a system of stamp duties be adopted to meet the resultant revenue needs. The
recommended duties included a tax:
On inventories of the effects of deceased persons, ten cents.
On receipts for legacies, or shares of personal estate, where the sum is above $50
and not exceeding $100, twenty-five cents; more than $100 and not exceeding
$500, fifty cents; for every further sum above $500, a dollar. Not to extend to
wives, children or grandchildren.
On probates of wills, and letters of administration, fifty cents.6
In 1796, the House Committee on Ways and means reported to Congress a bill to
adopt such a tax7 and the tax was enacted in 1797.
4 P.L. 107-16, 107th Cong., 1st Sess. (2001).
5 For a summary and description of current law in this area, please see, CRS Report 95-416,
Federal Estate, Gift , and Generation-Skipping Taxes: A Description of Current Law, by
John R. Luckey.
6 1 American State Papers in Finance 277.
7 Annals of Congress, 4th Cong., 1st Sess. 993 (1796). The tax proposed by the Ways and
means Committee, however, was not graduated, unlike the 1794 recommendation. The
Ways and Means proposal called for a flat 2 percent levy and exempted property passing to
parents, husbands, and lineal descendants.

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The Stamp Act of July 6, 1797,8 required the use of federal stamps on receipts
and discharges from legacies and intestate shares, and levied a charge for the
purchase of the required stamps. The rate structure recommended by the special
revenue committee in 1794 was adopted, along with exemptions for distributions to
a wife (but not husband), or a child or grandchild.9 The stamp tax continued in force
until 1802, when it was repealed.10 For the next 60 years, the federal tax structure
endured without any form of death tax.
The Civil War Inheritance Taxes: 1862-1870
The Civil War period was important in the development of the federal estate and
gift tax system. The Revenue Act of 1862 introduced the first federal gift tax and
included a number of features which have become important parts of the present
federal estate, gift, and generation-skipping tax laws, including taxation of certain
lifetime transfers of a testamentary character and exemption of small estates. During
the debate on the Act, Congress considered for the first time special treatment of
charitable transfers.11
The use of a federal death tax was revived in 1862 to meet the revenue demands
of the Civil War.12 The 1862 levy, like its predecessor, taxed legacies and distributive
shares of personal property but, unlike its predecessor, it was not a documentary stamp
tax but an inheritance tax (a tax imposed upon individuals who receive property from
a decedent upon the privilege of inheriting the property).13
8 Act of July 6, 1797, 1 Stat. 527.
9 The policy of favorable tax treatment of transfers to a spouse has continued into present
law, which affords special estate and gift tax deductions for certain interspousal transfers.
26 U.S.C. §§ 2056, and 2523.
10 Act of April 6, 1802, 2 Stat. 148.
11 During consideration of the 1862 tax, Representative William Payne Sheffield of Rhode
Island argued unsuccessfully for special treatment of charitable bequests. In debates on the
floor of the House of Representatives, Congressman Sheffield stated:
It seems to me proper for the national Legislature to give encouragement to
making of this class of devises for charitable and literary purposes. There are a
great many of them made — made to poor churches and made for the purpose of
building schools and colleges. The Government has frequently aided such
institutions by grants of land; and it seems to me to be in harmony with the
previous policy of our legislature to adopt a provision of this character. Cong.
Globe,
37th Cong., 2nd Sess. 1534 (1862).
12 Act of July 1, 1862, 12 Stat. 432, 483.
13 An inheritance tax may be distinguished from an estate tax, such as the tax presently
imposed by the federal government. An estate tax is imposed upon a decedent’s estate for
the privilege of passing the property to designated beneficiaries, whereas an inheritance tax
is imposed upon the beneficiaries themselves for the privilege of receiving legacies,
bequests and devises from the deceased.

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The amount of the 1862 tax was, as is typical of inheritance taxes, graduated
according to the closeness of the familial relationship between the decedent and the
beneficiary. The rates ranged from 0.75 percent, for distributions to ancestors, lineal
descendants, and siblings, to 5 percent, for distributions to distant relations and
unrelated persons. The tax was imposed only on personal estates in excess of $1,000.
Bequests to surviving spouses were entirely exempt from tax. Gifts intended to take
effect at the donor’s death or thereafter were included in the donor’s estate for tax
purposes.
War revenue needs prompted Congress to increase the rates of tax on
inheritances in 1864 and to impose a succession tax on the receipt of real property by
devise. The succession tax applied both to devises of real property and to transfers for
inadequate consideration, though transfers in consideration of marriage were regarded
as transfers for adequate consideration. Widows (though not widowers) were exempt
from the succession tax, and charitable transfers of real estate were expressly taxed
at the highest rate.14
In 1866, Congress responded to pleas of the Special Commissioner of the
Revenue and tightened enforcement of the legacy and succession taxes. A penalty of
up to $1,000 was imposed on executors and administrators who failed to furnish the
required statements or filed false statements.15
The legacy and succession taxes were repealed in 1870, when the need for their
additional revenues had ceased.16 Four years later, the United States Supreme Court
held, in Scholey v. Rew,17 that the legacy and succession taxes had been
constitutionally imposed.
In Scholey, the taxpayer contended that the Civil War death taxes were direct
taxes which, under the United States Constitution, must be apportioned according to
the census.18 The Court disagreed, stating that:
Taxes on lands, houses, and other permanent real estate have always been
deemed to be direct taxes, and capitation taxes, by the express words of the
Constitution, are within the same category, but it never has been decided that any
other legal exactions for the support of the federal government fall within the
condition that unless laid in proportion to the numbers that the assessment is
invalid.... Whether direct taxes in the sense of the Constitution comprehends any
other tax than a capitation tax and a tax on land is a question not absolutely
decided, nor is it necessary to determine it in the present case, as it is expressly
decided that the term does not include the tax on income, which cannot be
14 Act of July 30, 1864, 13 Stat. 285, 480.
15 Act of July 13, 1866, 14 Stat. 140.
16 Act of July 15, 1870, 16 Stat. 256.
17 23 Wall. (90 U.S.) 331 (1874).
18 U.S. Const., Art. I, § 9, cl. 4.

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distinguished in principle from a succession tax such as the one in the present
controversy.19
An Income Tax on Gifts and Inheritance: 1894
The Income Tax Act of 1894 was not, in a technical sense, a death or gift tax, but
it did treat gifts and inheritances as income and tax them as such.20 The tax was
short-lived, as the United States Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional in 1895, in
Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company.21 The Court found that, to the extent
the 1894 income tax was imposed on the gains from real estate, it so burdened the real
estate as to constitute a direct tax, which had to be apportioned among the states
according to the census. The Court struck down the entire statute because it found
that elimination of only the tax on real estate income would unduly burden the other
classes of income taxpayers, contrary to congressional intent.
Modified Estate Tax: 1898-1902
The War Revenue Act of 189822 imposed another death tax in order to raise
revenues to finance the Spanish-American War. The 1898 death tax was a form of
estate tax, levied upon the value of all personal property included in a decedent’s gross
estate. Property passing to a surviving spouse was excluded from the tax, and a
$10,000 specific exemption excluded small estates. The tax rates were graduated
from 0.74 percent to 15 percent, taking into consideration both the size of the estate
and the degree of kinship of the decedent and the beneficiaries.
The United States Supreme Court upheld the 1898 estate tax in Knowlton v.
Moore.23 The Court reaffirmed its earlier decision in Scholey v. Rew, supra, and said
that the estate tax, like the inheritance tax, was an indirect tax subject to the rule of
uniformity and not the rule of apportionment. The Court rejected the contention that
death taxes were the exclusive prerogative of the states and held that, although wills
and distribution of estates were matters for state law, taxation of these transfers could
rest with the federal government as well as the states.
The 1898 estates tax was amended in 1901 to exempt bequests to charitable,
religious, literary and educational organizations and to organizations for the
19 23 Wall. (90 U.S.) 331, 347.
20 Act of August 27, 1894, 28 Stat. 509, 553.
21 158 U.S. 429 (1895). This case is often correctly viewed as setting the stage for the
passage of the Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which expressly
authorizes the imposition of an income tax without apportionment by census.
22 Act of June 4, 1898, 30 Stat. 448, 464.
23 178 U.S. 41 (1900).

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encouragement of the arts or the prevention of cruelty to children.24 In 1902, the estate
tax was repealed.25
Reasons for Federal Death Taxes: 1789-1915
Federal death taxes in the United States between 1797 and 1915 appear to have
served as supplementary revenue sources adopted only during war times. There is
little support for the theory that these taxes were levied in an attempt to prevent the
transfer of vast estates or to redistribute wealth.
Attitudes began to change with respect to the perpetuation of large estates,
however, and in a speech in 1906 President Theodore Roosevelt called for:
a progressive tax on all fortunes beyond a certain amount, either given in life or
devised or bequested upon death to any individual — a tax so framed as to put it
out of the power of the owner of one of these enormous fortunes to hand on more
than a certain amount to any one individual.26
Development of the Modern Federal Estate and Gift
Taxes: 1916-1975
A history of the modern federal estate and gift taxes must begin in 1916. Though
since extensively reexamined and revised numerous times, legislation enacted that
year is the direct ancestor of current law.
The Revenue Act of 1916
In 1916, Congress reacted to a mixture of changing attitudes and revenue
shortages, the latter caused by a reduction in United States trade tariff receipts in the
early years of World War I. It became apparent that greater reliance would have to be
placed on internal taxes and that dependence on tariffs would have to be reduced. One
internal tax was a federal estate tax.
The estate tax adopted in the Revenue Act of 191627 had many features of the
current taxes. It was measured by the value of the property owned by a decedent at
the date of death and the value of a decedent’s estate was increased for tax purposes
by certain lifetime transfers, including transfers for inadequate consideration, transfers
not intended to take effect until death, and transfers in contemplation of death.28 The
24 Act of March 2, 1901, 31 Stat. 946.
25 Act of April 12, 1902, 32 Stat. 96.
26 See, quotation in Randolph E. Paul, Taxation in the United States p. 88 (Boston, 1954).
27 Act of September 8, 1916, 39 Stat. 756; on rationale for the tax as a revenue measure, see,
H.Rept. 64- 922, 64th Cong., 1st Sess. 1-5 (1916).
28 A gift was presumed to have been made in contemplation of death if it was made within
(continued...)

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full value of property owned concurrently by a decedent and another person would be
included in the decedent’s gross estate, unless it could be established that the
surviving joint owner had contributed part of the property’s acquisition cost.
The 1916 estate tax allowed the executor to reduce a decedent’s estate for tax
purposes by a $50,000 exemption and the amount of any funeral expenses,
administration expenses, debts, losses, and claims against the estate. The tax rates
ranged from 1 percent on net estates of up to $50,000, to 10 percent on net estates over
$5,000,000.
The Supreme Court upheld the 1916 estate tax in New York Trust Company v.
Eisner.29 Writing for the Court, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes stated:
The statement of the constitutional objections urged imports on its face a
distinction that, if correct, evidently hitherto has escaped this Court. See, United
States v. Field
, 255 U.S. 257. It is admitted, as since Knowlton v. Moore, 178
U.S. 41, it has to be, that the United States has power to tax legacies, but it is said
that this tax is cast upon a transfer while it is being effectuated by the State itself
and therefore, is an intrusion upon its processes, whereas a legacy tax is not
imposed until the process is complete. An analogy is sought in the difference
between the attempt of a State to tax commerce among the States and its right
after the goods have become mingled with the general stock in the State. A
consideration of the parallel is enough to detect the fallacy. A tax that was
directed solely against goods imported into the State and that was determined by
the fact of importation would be no better after the goods were at rest in the State
than before. It would be as much an interference with commerce in one case as
in the other . . . . Conversely, if a tax on the property distributed by the laws of
a States, determined by the fact that distribution has been accomplished, is valid,
tax determined by the fact that distribution is about to begin is no greater
interference and is equally good.30
Rate Increases: 1917
The revenue demands of defense preparations prompted increases of one-half in
the estate tax rates, as part of the Revenue Act of 1917.31 Later in that same year, two
new rate brackets were added at the upper end of the rate scale.32 By the end of 1917,
the estate tax rates progressed from 2 percent on net estates below $50,000, to 22
percent on net estates between $8,000,000 and $10,000,000, and 25 percent on net
estates above $10,000,000. Estates of individuals whose death resulted from military
service were not taxed.
28 (...continued)
two years of death. The executor could rebut this presumption by showing that the gift was
motivated by lifetime considerations, rather than death tax avoidance.
29 256 U.S. 345 (1920).
30 256 U.S. at 348.
31 Act of March 3, 1917, 39 Stat. 1000; for statements regarding its necessity to provide war
revenues, see, H.Rept. 64-1366, 64th Cong., 2nd Sess. 1-3 (1917).
32 Act of October 3, 1917, 40 Stat. 300.

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Estate Tax Fluctuations and a Brief Gift Tax: 1918-1926
The conclusion of World War I prompted debates over the continued existence
of the estate tax. The House of Representatives approved a rate in 191833 but the
Senate sought instead to replace the estate tax with an inheritance tax. The Revenue
Act of 191834 reflected a compromise between the views of the House and Senate,
retaining the estate tax but cutting the rates on estates of less than $1,000,000.
The 1918 law also expanded the estate tax base by including the value of a
surviving spouse’s dower or curtesy right in the decedent’s estate and the proceeds,
over $40,000, of life insurance policies on the decedent’s life, if they were receivable
by the executor or the estate. The 1918 Act also included in the gross estate the value
of any property subject to a general power of appointment held by the decedent,
whether exercised in the decedent’s will or exercised during the decedent’s life in
contemplation of death.35 Charitable contributions were deductible in computing the
taxable estate.
The estate tax remained unchanged until 1924, when Congress again increased
the estate tax rates to a top rate of 40 percent on net estates over $10,000,000; made
certain adjustments to the estate tax base; and added a gift tax.36 The estate tax base
was increased by adding the value of property which a decedent transferred during life
but over which the decedent retained the power to “alter, amend, or revoke” the
beneficial enjoyment. Provision was also made for allocating to the estate a portion
of the value of concurrently owned property acquired by a decedent and a surviving
joint owner by gift or inheritance, in which case there would be no relative
contributions. Also, a credit against the federal estate tax was allowed for state death
taxes, up to a total of 25 percent of the federal tax liability.
The Revenue Act of 1924 also added a gift tax with the same rate schedule as the
estate tax. A lifetime exclusion of $50,000 and an annual exclusion of $500 per donee
were both allowed. Neither charitable contributions nor gifts of property which the
donor had received by gift or inheritance within the past five years were subject to gift
tax.
33 See, H.Rept. 65-767, 65th Cong., 2nd Sess. (1918); and the debates on H.R. 12863, 65th
Cong., 2nd Sess., 56 Cong. Rec. (1918).
34 Act of February 24, 1919, 40 Stat. 1057.
35 A power of appointment is a right held by someone other than the owner of property, to
designate the person or persons who will enjoy the benefits of the property. For example,
a power to designate who will receive the income from certain stocks would be a general
power of appointment over the income from stocks. The power to designate who would
receive the stocks at the owner’s death would be a general power of appointment over the
stocks themselves.
36 Revenue Act of 1924, Act of June 2, 1924, 43 Stat. 253.

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Stiff opposition to the estate and gift taxes increased during the mid-1920s, and
in 1926 the gift tax and many of the estate tax rate increases were repealed.37 The
1926 Act created an estate tax rate range from 1 percent on net estates under $50,000,
to 20 percent on net estates above $10,000,000. The estate tax exemption was
increased from $50,000 to $100,000, and the maximum credit for state death taxes
was increased from 25 percent to 80 percent of the federal estate tax liability.
Although the 1924 gift tax was repealed by the Revenue Act of 1926, it did
stimulate a decision of the United States Supreme Court upholding its
constitutionality. In Bromley v. McCaughn,38 the Court held that the gift tax was an
excise tax of the constitutional class of indirect taxes, requiring only intrinsic
uniformity, rather than apportionment.
Estate Tax Rate Increases and a Permanent Gift Tax: 1932-
1941

The depression of the 1930s reduced income tax revenues and increased the
demand for revenues to finance various new Government projects. Again, Congress
turned to the estate and gift taxes.
The Revenue Act of 193239 increased the estate tax rates at virtually every level,
added two new rate brackets, and reduced the estate tax exemption to its 1924 level
of $50,000. The resultant estate tax had rates graduated from 1 percent on net estates
up to $100,000, to 45 percent on net estates above $10,000,000.
The 1932 Act also reintroduced a federal gift tax, but with rates set at
three-quarters of the estate tax rates, a level maintained until 1976. The lifetime gift
tax exclusion was set at $50,000, and the annual exclusion at $5,000 per donee. No
tax was imposed on charitable gifts.
The gift tax was, and continues to be, cumulative. That is, the rate of tax on each
successive taxable gift over the donor’s lifetime is computed on the basis of the total
amount of all such gifts. If two donors each made identical gifts of $50,000 in a
specific year, the donor with the greater amount of lifetime taxable gifts (after 1932)
would pay the higher tax on the present transfer.
Between 1934 and 1942, social policies and wartime demands led to a series of
estate and gift tax rate increases, though the gift tax rates continued to be maintained
at three-quarters of the estate tax rates. The Revenue Act of 1934 raised the maximum
estate tax rate to 60 percent, on a net estate over $10,000,000,40 and the Revenue Act
37 Revenue Act of 1926, Act of February 26, 1926, 44 Stat. 9; on the necessity of the estate
tax rate increases to provide revenues to finance new Federal projects, see, H.Rept. 72-708,
72nd Cong., 1st Sess. 1-4 (1932).
38 280 U.S. 124 (1929).
39 Act of June 6, 1932, 47 Stat. 169.
40 Act of May 10, 1934, 48 Stat. 680.

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of 1935 further raised it to 70 percent, on net estates over $50,000,000.41 The 1935
Act also reduced the estate and gift tax lifetime exemptions to $40,000 each.
The outbreak of World War II in Europe raised congressional concern over the
state of American military preparedness and prompted an increase in the estate and
gift taxes to provide additional revenue. The Revenue Act of 1940 added a 10 percent
surtax to the income, estate, and gift taxes.42 The Revenue Act of 1941 increased the
estate and gift tax rates even further, producing an estate tax rate graduation from 3
percent, on net estates not over $5,000, to 77 percent, on net estates over
$50,000,000.43 The gift tax rates were maintained at three-quarters of the estate tax
rates.
Further Rate Adjustments and the Marital Deduction: 1942-
1948

The basic estate and gift tax exemptions were altered again by the Revenue Act
of 1942,44 which created a $60,000 estate tax exemption, a $30,000 lifetime gift tax
exclusion, and a $3,000 annual per donee gift tax exclusion. The 1942 Act also
increased the estate tax base by including in a decedent’s gross estate the proceeds of
any life insurance policy on the decedent’s life if either the proceeds were payable to
or for the benefit of the estate or the decedent had paid the premiums on the policy.
The 1942 Act also attempted to correct the perceived inequity in estate and gift
taxation between residents of community property states and non-community property
states.45 Property owned concurrently by a decedent and a surviving spouse in a non-
community property state was excluded from the decedent’s gross estate only to the
extent it could be shown that the surviving spouse contributed to the acquisition cost.
In a community property state, however, one-half of all property acquired by either
spouse during their marriage belonged to each spouse, by operation of law. On the
death of either spouse, only one-half of the community property would be subject to
estate taxes.46 This resulted in the automatic equalization of the estates of spouses
residing in community property states and a lower total estate tax burden.
Congress attempted to resolve this problem by treating community property like
it treated concurrently owned property in a non-community property state.
Community property was included in a decedent’s gross estate except to the extent
that the surviving spouse could be shown to have contributed to the acquisition cost.
41 Act of August 30, 1935, 49 Stat. 1014.
42 Act of June 25, 1940, 54 Stat. 516; on the reason for the increased rates, see, H.Rept. 76-
2491, 76th Cong., 3rd Sess. 1 (1940).
43 Act of September 20, 1941, 55 Stat. 687.
44 Act of October 21, 1942, 56 Stat. 798.
45 Under community property laws, the property acquired by either spouse during their
marriage belongs half to each spouse.
46 See Estate of Eisner v. Comm’r, B.T.A. Memo. Op. (October 31, 1939); and Hernandez
v. Becker
, 54 F.2d 542 (10th Cir. 1931).

CRS-11
This solution, deemed complex and unsuccessful, was replaced in the Revenue
Act of 194847 by the estate and gift tax marital deductions and the rules on split-gifts.
The estate tax marital deduction permitted a decedent’s estate to deduct the value of
all property passing to a surviving spouse, whether passing under the will or
otherwise.
Under the 1948 Act, the maximum deduction was one-half of the
decedent’s adjusted gross estate (the gross estate less debts, taxes and administration
expenses). Community property, however, was ineligible for the estate tax marital
deduction, thereby equalizing the tax treatment of estates of residents of community
property states and non-community property states.
The gift tax marital deduction allowed a donor to deduct one-half of an
interspousal gift, other than community property, to a third person. Concomitantly,
the split gift rule allowed the non-donor spouse to elect to be treated as having made
a gift of one-half the total transfer. This election was to be made on the gift tax return,
and use of two annual exclusions on gifts by a spouse to a third person was permitted.
Changes in the Estate Taxation of Life Insurance: 1954
The estate taxation of life insurance proceeds was changed during the
recodification of the tax laws in 1954. The Internal Revenue Code of 1954 includes
the proceeds of a life insurance policy on the decedent’s life in the gross estate if the
proceeds were payable to, or for the benefit of, the estate, if the decedent retained any
incidents of ownership in the policy on the date of death, or if the decedent gave away
any of the incidents of ownership in the policy within three years of death and in
contemplation of death.48
Restructuring of the Federal Transfer Tax System:
1976—1998
Starting in 1976, Congress enacted major revisions to the federal transfer tax
system. The estate and gift tax laws were significantly altered. A new tax on
generation-skipping transfers was added.49 The greatest structural change was the
unification of the estate and gift taxes.
The Tax Reform Act of 1976
The Tax Reform Act of 197650 created a unified estate and gift tax framework,
consisting of a single graduated rate of tax imposed on both lifetime gifts and
47 Act of April 2, 1948, 62 Stat. 110.
48 26 U.S.C. § 2042. An “incident of ownership” is any economic benefit from the policy,
such as the right to change the beneficiary, to borrow against the cash surrender value, or
to cancel the policy.
49 P.L. 94-455 §§ 2001-2009; See also, Staff on the Joint Committee on Taxation, 94th Cong.,
2nd Sess., General Explanation of the Tax Reform Act of 1976, 525-597 (1976).
50 P.L. 94-455, 94th Cong., 2nd Sess. (1976).

CRS-12
testamentary dispositions. The gift tax remained cumulative, so that the rate of tax on
each successive taxable gift was higher throughout the donor’s entire lifetime.
Transfers made at death are treated as the last taxable gift of the deceased donor.
Therefore, the amount of lifetime taxable gifts affects the rate of tax imposed on the
donor’s taxable estate, though it does not affect the actual size of the taxable estate.
The estate and gift tax rates were graduated to a maximum tax rate of 70 percent on
cumulative gifts or taxable estates of more than $5,000,000.51
The Tax Reform Act of 1976 also merged the estate tax exclusion and the
lifetime gift tax exclusion into a single, unified estate and gift tax credit,52 which may
be used to offset gift tax liability during the donor’s lifetime but which, if unused at
death, is available to offset the deceased donor’s estate tax liability. The credit was
$42,500 for transfers made in 1980 and $47,000 for transfers made after 1980. This
was equivalent to an estate and gift tax exemption of $161,000 for transfers made
during 1980 and $175,625 for transfers made after 1980.53 The $3,000 per donee
annual gift tax exclusion was retained unchanged.
The Tax Reform Act of 1976 also changed the income tax consequences of a sale
of property received from a decedent. The gain on a sale is the difference between the
amount realized by the seller and the seller’s basis. An heir’s basis in inherited
property, prior to the 1976 Act, was its fair market value for federal estate tax
purposes. Therefore, if inherited property were sold soon after the date of death, there
would be no gain and no income tax liability. The appreciation accruing prior to the
date of death would be forever eliminated from the income tax base. The 1976 Act
provided a rule under which the basis of property received from a decedent was
“carried over” from the decedent. This so-called “carryover basis” rule gave heirs a
basis in inherited property equal to the decedent’s basis on the date of death, with
adjustments for a share of the appreciation accruing before 1977, a share of the estate
taxes paid on the property, and a share of the state death taxes imposed on the
property. The heir could also increase the basis in all of the decedent’s property to a
minimum basis of $60,000.54
The 1976 Act also increased the limitation on the estate tax marital deductions
for moderate-sized estates, allowing the deduction for the greater of one-half of the
adjusted gross estate (the former limitation) or $250,000.55 In conjunction with the
unified transfer tax credit, the increased estate tax marital deduction permitted the tax-
51 P.L. 94-455 § 2001.
52 P.L. 94-455 § 2001.
53 The credit was a dollar-for-dollar offset against tax, rather than a deduction from the
amount of taxable gifts or taxable estate. Therefore, the $47,000 credit was equivalent to
an exemption of $175,625 because it would cover the gift or estate tax on a transfer of
$175,625.
54 P.L. 94-455 § 2005. This rule never went into effect. Its effective date was suspended
and later the rule was repealed retroactively to its date of enactment. See, discussion of the
Revenue Act of 1978 and the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act of 1980, supra.
55 P.L. 94-455 § 2002.

CRS-13
free passage of an estate of up to $425,625 in 1981, if at least $250,000 passed to the
surviving spouse.
The limitation on the gift tax marital deduction was also increased in certain
cases, allowing a donor spouse to deduct the full amount of the first $100,000 of
lifetime interspousal taxable gifts after 1976, but allowing no deduction on the next
$100,000 of interspousal taxable gifts. A deduction was allowed for one-half of the
value of all subsequent interspousal taxable gifts.56
The inclusion of property transferred by gift in contemplation of death was also
revised by the 1976 Act, eliminating the rebuttable presumption that all gifts made
within three years of death were made in contemplation of death. Now, the 1976 Act
required automatic inclusion in the gross estate of the value of all gifts made within
three years of death, unless they were less than $3,000.57
The 1976 Act also provided a method by which spouses could assure the
exclusion of one-half of the value of concurrently owned property by electing to treat
the creation of the joint interest as a taxable gift.58 Previously, a gift to a spouse of
one-half of the value of concurrently owned property did not remove any portion of
the value of the property from the donor’s gross estate, if the donor predeceased.
Under the “fractional interest” rule, however, if the creation of the concurrently owned
property was a taxable gift, and if certain other requirements were met, the estate of
the first spouse to die included only one-half of the value of the concurrently owned
property. Therefore, the executor did not have to establish relative contributions of
the deceased and the surviving spouse.
The 1976 Act provided special rules for estates composed principally of interests
in a closely held business or family farm. If the business (or farm) interest was a
sufficiently large share of the estate, and if it satisfied certain other requirements, any
real estate used in the farm or business will be valued at its present use, rather than its
“highest and best use.”59 This provision could reduce the size of the decedent’s gross
estate by up to $500,000, but any estate tax savings were recaptured if the business or
farm was not continued by the decedent’s family for the next 15 years.
The 1976 Act also permitted estates composed primarily of an interest in a
closely-held business or family farm to defer payment of the estate taxes attributable
56 To further integrate the estate and gift taxes there was an offset in the estate tax marital
deduction for gifts which qualify for more than a one-half gift tax marital deduction. To the
extent that a decedent’s life time taxable interspousal gifts were less than $250,000, the
estate tax maximum marital deduction was reduced by the difference between the actual gift
tax marital deduction on these transfers and one-half of the value of the gifts. P.L. 94-455
§ 2002(a) and (b).
57 P.L. 94-455 § 2001(a)(5).
58 P.L. 94-455 § 2002(C).
59 P.L. 94-555, §2003(a).

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to the business interest.60 If certain rules were met regarding the size of the business
interest in proportion to the estate, no portion of the estate taxes attributable to the
business interest would have to be paid for the first five years, with only interest
required. The estate taxes on this share of the estate were allowed to be paid in up to
ten equal annual installments thereafter.
The 1976 Act also created an estate tax deduction for certain bequests to minor
children of the decedent if the children had no other living parents after the decedent’s
death. This “orphan’s deduction” was limited to $5,000 for each year each child is
under 21 years of age.61
One of the major changes in the 1976 Act was the adoption of a new tax on
certain generation-skipping transfers. A generation-skipping transfer was defined as
one which split the enjoyment and ownership of property between two individuals.
The first level of beneficiaries, usually the donor’s children, received the right to use
and benefit from property during their lifetime. The second level of beneficiaries,
usually the settlor’s grandchildren, received the out-right ownership of the property
at the termination of the interests of the first level of beneficiaries. Prior to the 1976
Act, the character of the interests held by the different beneficiaries had resulted in
estate or gift taxation of the property to the donor and the ultimate, second level of
beneficiaries, but not the intervening, first level of beneficiaries.
The Tax Reform Act of 1976 added a complex series of rules designed to treat
the termination of the interest of the intervening beneficiaries as a taxable event, taxed
at a rate equal to the estate and gift tax rates which would have been applicable had
the property been transferred outright by the donor and then by the first beneficiary.62
The Revenue Act of 1978
The Revenue Act of 197863 made a number of technical changes in the estate and
gift tax rules added in 1976, and two substantive changes. First, it suspended the
effective date of the carryover basis rules until 1980. Second, it provided a set of rules
by which a surviving spouse who “materially participated” in the operation of a family
firm or closely held business owned concurrently with a deceased spouse, could treat
a portion of appreciation in the value of the business that accrued during the period
of such participation, as cash consideration contributed by that surviving spouse.
Therefore, a share of the value of the concurrently owned business assets would not
be taxable in the estate of the deceased spouse because it would be treated as having
come from the surviving spouse’s contributions.64
60 P.L. 94-455, § 2004(a).
61 P.L. 94-455 § 2007. This tax never went into effect. Its effective date was suspended and
later it was repealed retroactively to its date of enactment and replaced with a new tax. See,
P.L. 99-514, §§ 1431-1433.
62 P.L. 94-455, § 2006(a).
63 P.L. 95-600, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. (1978).
64 P.L. 95-600, § 511(a).

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The Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act of 1980
The Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act of 198065 is, perhaps, an odd vehicle for
an important death tax provision. However, it was as an amendment to this bill that
the carryover basis rules of the Tax Reform Act of 1976 were repealed, retroactive to
the effective date of the 1976 Act.66
The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981
The Economic Recovery Act of 1981 (ERTA)67 made substantial changes in the
estate tax apparently designed to reduce the number of taxable estates and to prevent
the imposition of an estate or gift tax on interspousal transfers. With only minor
exceptions, these changes applied to estates of decedents dying after December 31,
1981, and to gifts made after December 31, 1981.
ERTA increased the unified transfer tax credit from $47,000 to $192,800,
phased-in over six years, effectively increasing the exemption equivalent from
$175,625 to $600,000 over that period.68 Also phased-in over a three year period was
a reduction, from 70 percent to 50 percent, in the top estate, gift, and
generation-skipping transfer tax rates applicable to transfers above $2,500,000.69
ERTA made substantial changes in the marital deduction. The quantitative limits
on the estate and gift tax marital deductions were eliminated, thereby allowing
unlimited interspousal tax-free transfers after December 31, 1981. The marital
65 P.L. 96-223, 96th Cong., 2d Sess. (1980).
66 Executors could elect to use the carryover basis rules on certain estates of decedents who
died after December 31, 1976, and before November 7, 1980.
67 P.L. 97-34, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. (1981); see also, H.Rept. 97-201, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. 154-
196 (1981); S.Rept.97-144, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. 124-142 (1981); and H.Rept.97- 215, 97th
Cong., 1st Sess. 247-257 (1981).
68 P.L. 97-34, § 401. The credit was phased-in as follows:
Year
Credit
Exemption Equivalent
1981
$47,000
$175,625
1982
$62,800
$225,000
1983
$79,300
$275,000
1984
$96,300
$325,000
1985
$121,800
$400,000
1986
$155,800
$500,000
1987+
$192,800
$600,000
69 P.L. 97-34, § 402.

CRS-16
deduction was permitted for transfers of certain lifetime income interests in trust or
otherwise, if the donor or executor elects to include the full value of the transferred
property in the estate of the donee or surviving spouse. Transfers of income interests
in charitable remainder trusts after December 31, 1981, were allowed to qualify for
the marital deduction.70
A new rule was enacted regarding the estate taxation of property owned jointly
by spouses with a right of survivorship. This rule required including in the gross
estate of a decedent dying after December 31, 1981, only one-half of the value of
property owned jointly with a right of survivorship by the decedent and the surviving
spouse and no other persons, regardless of the relative contributions of the decedent
and the surviving spouse. The 1981 Act also repeals the special rules that formerly
applied with respect to elective fractional interests of a husband and wife in a jointly
owned property and to jointly owned farm or business property.71
ERTA liberalized and simplified the rules by which an estate qualifies to have
family farm or closely held business real estate valued at its present use, rather than
its highest and best use. Included was a special rule to enable individuals more easily
to retire on Social Security without losing the ability to specially value their farm or
business real estate. The “material participation” standard was reduced in certain
cases, and the amount by which a decedent’s gross estate can be reduced by special
use valuation was increased from $500,000 to $750,000. These rules apply generally
with respect to estates of decedents dying after December 31, 1981.72
ERTA also liberalized and simplified the rules by which the estate taxes
attributable to an interest in a closely held business can be paid in installments over
a 15-year period. A special 4 percent interest rate on the deferred tax attributable to
the first $1,000,000 in value was provided, with respect to estates of decedents dying
after December 31, 1981.73
The new law also eliminates the former 10-year
installment payment rule.
After 1981, the rule by which property given away within three years of the date
of death is automatically included in the gross estate of the donor was eliminated for
most types of gifts. The automatic inclusion rule was retained in certain special
instances, such as gifts of life insurance policies.74
ERTA increased the annual gift tax per donee exclusion from $3,000 to $10,000,
with respect to taxable gifts after December 31, 1981. The Act also permitted an
unlimited annual exclusion for the payment of a donee’s tuition or medical expenses.75
70 P.L. 97-34, § 403.
71 P.L. 97-34, § 403(c).
72 P.L. 97-34, § 421.
73 P.L. 97-34, § 422.
74 P.L. 97-34, § 424(a).
75 P.L. 97-34, § 441.

CRS-17
Only an annual gift tax return was required to be filed after 1981. The filing date
for this return was set on the same date as the donor’s income tax return, including
time for extensions.76
A qualified disclaimer for estate and gift tax purposes was permitted even if the
disclaimer was invalid under applicable State law, if the disclaimant actually
transferred the property to the person who would have taken it if the disclaimer had
been valid.77
ERTA repealed the orphan’s deduction allowed first under the Tax Reform Act
of 1976.78 It also delayed for an additional year the effective date of the generation
skipping transfer tax rules with regard to transfers under wills and revocable trusts in
existence on June 11, 1976.79
The Deficit Reduction Act of 1984
The Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 (DFRA)80 contained a number of changes
involving gift and estate taxes, though the essential thrust of the Economic Recovery
Tax Act was unaffected.81 DFRA froze the maximum gift and estate tax rate at 1984
levels (55 percent) until 1988. Under ERTA the top rate was scheduled to fall to the
50 percent level in 1985.82
DFRA modified the gift and estate tax law to liberalize provisions for gift tax
free transfers to former spouses pursuant to a written agreement. It increased to three
years, two years before and one year after a divorce, the period for making an
agreement for such transfers. It also allowed an estate tax deduction for such
transfers.83
DFRA made three changes that affected estates containing closely held
businesses. First, it modified the installment payment provisions applicable to a
closely held business interest to permit their use in a modified form where non-readily
tradeable stock is indirectly owned. This was accomplished by permitting a look
through a passive holding company to determine if the decedent owned 20 percent or
more of the voting stock and the value of such closely held business interest exceeded
76 P.L. 97-34, § 401(a)(2)(B).
77 P.L. 97-34, § 426(a).
78 P.L. 97-34, § 427(a).
79 P.L. 97-34 § 428.
80 P.L. 98-369, 98th Cong., 2nd Sess. (1984); see also, H.Rept. 98-432, part II, 98th Cong., 2nd
Sess. 1504-1522 (1984); S.Rept. 98-169, 98th Cong., 2nd Sess. 711-725 (1984); and H.Rept.
98-861, 98th Cong., 2nd Sess. 774, 1120, and 1235-1243 (1984).
81 P.L. 97-448 § 104, 97th Cong., 2nd Sess. (1982), Technical Corrections Act of 1982,
included several provisions to clarify the 1981 ERTA Gift and Estate Tax provisions.
82 P.L 98-369 § 21.
83 P.L. 98-369 § 425.

CRS-18
35 percent of the adjusted value of the estate.84 Second, the alternate valuation rules
were amended to permit an election on late returns, those filed within one year of the
due date, and to prevent use of alternate valuation except where it resulted in a
decrease in both the total value of the estate and estate taxes;85 Third, a provision to
permit perfection of a current use valuation election notice or agreement, where there
was substantial compliance with IRS regulations in the original notice or agreement,
was enacted.86
In DFRA, Congress, for the first time, adopted statutory provisions governing gift
loans (certain below market interest rate loans) which treat foregone interest as a gift.
An exception was provided where loans do not exceed $100,000. The Act also
provided for income tax treatment of the imputed interest.87
DFRA also provided for the: addition of permanent rules for permitting
reformation of a charitable, split-interest trust, to comply with the 1969 Tax Reform
Act requirements for income, estate, or gift tax deductibility as a charitable
contribution (Congress had in the past enacted temporary provisions permitting
reformation);88 elimination of the $100,000 estate tax exclusion for certain retirement
benefits payable at death from individual retirement accounts, qualified plans, military
retirement, and tax sheltered annuities;89 and clarification of congressional intent to
apply transfer taxes (gift, estate, and generation-skipping) to certain bonds exempt
from income tax by virtue of law outside the Internal Revenue Code.90
The Tax Reform Act of 1986
The Tax Reform Act of 198691 contained four generally applicable changes to the
estate, gift, and generation-skipping taxes. The most extensive of these changes was
the repeal of the existing generation-skipping transfer tax retroactive to June 11, 1976,
and enactment of a new system to tax such transfers.92 This new tax replaced the
graduated tax, based on the estate tax rates, with a flat rate tax set at the highest estate
tax rate, currently 55 percent. The tax was applicable to all generation-skipping
84 P.L. 98-369 § 1021.
Where the stock is indirectly owned and the quantitative
requirements are met, an installment payment election may be made, but the 4 percent
interest rate and 5-year deferral of principal payments of certain amounts of deferred tax
payments, available for directly owned interests, are not applicable.
85 P.L. 98-369 §§ 1023, 1024.
86 P.L. 98-369 § 1025.
87 P.L. 98-369 § 172.
88 P.L. 98-369 § 1022.
89 P.L. 98-369 § 525.
90 P.L. 98-369 § 641.
91 P.L. 99-514, 99th Cong., 2nd Sess. (1986). See also, H.R. Rep. 841, 99th Cong., 2nd Sess.
770-776 (1986).
92 P.L. 99-514 §§ 1431-1433.

CRS-19
transfers, including transfers which directly skipped a generation without the
intervening generation enjoying any beneficial interest in the transferred property.93
The Tax Reform Act also included: a 50 percent exclusion from estate taxation
of qualified proceeds from qualified sales of employer securities to an employee stock
option plan;94 modification of the definition of the qualified conservation contribution
rules to allow a deduction without regard to whether contributions met the
“conservation purpose” requirement of the income tax;95 and repeal of the gift tax
exclusion for an employee’s exercise or non-exercise of an election under which an
annuity, pension, from a qualified plan, tax-deferred annuity, IRA, or military pension
would be paid to a beneficiary after the employee’s death.96
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 (OBRA)97 contained four
amendments to the estate, gift and generation-skipping taxes. The first of these
amendments froze the generation-skipping tax rate and the top gift and estate tax rates
at 55 percent, delaying the drop to a 50 percent rate until after December 31, 1992.98
OBRA provided for a phase-out of the unified credit for estate and gift transfers
exceeding $10,000,000. This phase-out is accomplished by adding a 5 percent tax to
the tax on taxable transfers over this amount until the benefit of the unified credit has
been recaptured.
Thus between 1988 and the end of 1992, transfers between
$10,000,000 and $21,040,000 would be taxed at 60 percent. Once the recapture is
complete, 55 percent would again become the tax rate. After 1992, when the top rate
was scheduled to drop to 50 percent, the recapture was apply to transfers between
$10,000,000 and $18,340,000.99
This provision did not affect the tax rate for
computing the generation-skipping transfer tax.100
OBRA closed a perceived loop hole which had been created by the provision of
the Tax Reform Act of 1986 which established the estate tax deduction for sales of
employer securities to an ESOP. This provision had left open the possibility that an
estate could, through a series of purchases and sales to an ESOP, totally wipe out its
estate tax liability. The Act clarifies and restricts the availability of this deduction by:
93 These “direct skips” were not taxed under the 1976 generation-skipping transfer tax.
94 P.L. 99-514 § 1172.
95 P.L. 99-514 § 1422.
96 P.L. 99-514 § 1852(e). This section also makes technical corrections to 26 U.S.C. § 2039
by repealing subsection (c).
97 P.L. 100-203, 100th Cong., 1st Sess. (1987). See also, H.Rept. 100-495, 100th Cong., 1st
Sess. 992-998 (1987).
98 P.L. 100-203, § 10401(a).
99 This drop in rates was retroactively repealed by P.L. 103-66, § 13208, 103rd Cong., 1st
Sess. (1993).
100 P.L. 100-203, § 10401(b).

CRS-20
limiting the deduction to sales of nonpublicly traded securities; limiting the deduction
to 50 percent of the taxable estate; limiting the maximum reduction in estate taxes to
$750,000; imposing holding requirements on the decedent and the ESOP; prohibiting
the deduction in the case of securities acquired with assets transferred from another
plan of the employer; and imposing an excise tax on the ESOP for failure to satisfy
the allocation and holding period requirements.101
Finally, OBRA provided that “valuation” or “estate freeze” transactions will
cause the total value of the property transferred in the transaction to be included in the
decedent’s gross estate as property in which the decedent had a retained interest.102
The Technical and Miscellaneous Revenue Act of 1988
The Technical and Miscellaneous Revenue Act of 1988 (TAMRA)103 contained
a number of amendments to the estate, gift, and generation-skipping taxes. Many of
these, as the name of the Act implies, were technical in nature. Among these were a
number of clarifying amendments to the generation-skipping transfer tax which
affected such areas as: the overlapping definitions of “direct skips,” “taxable
terminations,” and “taxable distributions;” the inclusion ratio for charitable lead trusts
and nontaxable gifts; generation assignment; taxation rules for multiple skips; and the
grandchild exemption.104
TAMRA made several changes expanding and clarifying the situations to which
the estate freeze rules apply.105 The Act also removed the marital deduction for both
101 P.L. 100-203, § 10411-10413. The retroactive effect of this provision was upheld by the
Supreme Court in U.S. v. Carlton, 114 S.Ct. 2018 (1994).
102 P.L. 100-203, § 10402.
In general, a freeze transaction involves the division of
ownership of a business into two parts, a growth interest and an interest in the current value
of the business, which is the interest which is frozen. By selling, at a nominal price, or
giving away the growth interest, a taxpayer could maintain control of the business and
continue to enjoy the income from the business while excluding any future appreciation in
its value from his gross estate. The classic freeze transaction is a recapitalization of a
closely held business. The transferor exchanges his common stock for voting preferred
stock, which represents the current value of the business entity. New common stock is given
to the transferor’s children. This stock, at the time of the gift, has practically no value, but
as the value of the business appreciates, the appreciation in value is represented in this
common stock. If not for this provision, this transaction would “freeze” the transferor’s
interest in the business at the value it had at the time of the transaction and any appreciation
value would pass to his children free of estate taxation because it had been given away. This
estate tax benefit is eliminated by treating a retained frozen interest as the equivalent of a
retained life estate in the gifted growth interest.
This provision was repealed retroactively to the date of its enactment by the Omnibus
Reconciliation Act of 1990, P.L. 101-508, § 11601, supra.
103 P.L. 100-647, 100th Cong., 2nd Sess. (1988).
104 P.L. 100-647, § 1014.
105 P.L. 100-647, § 3031.

CRS-21
the estate and the gift tax when a spouse is not a citizen of the United States unless the
transfer is made utilizing a “qualified domestic trust.”106
TAMRA amended the alternate valuation rules for family farms. Under the
amendment, a surviving spouse may rent the farm to a family member on a net cash
basis without incurring recapture liability.
The amendment applied to rentals
occurring after December 31, 1976. The statute of limitations for refunds for closed
years was waived for claims made within one year of TAMRA’s enactment.107
Under prior law, art loaned to a tax-exempt organization was a transfer taxable
under the gift tax. Such a transfer did not qualify for the gift tax charitable deduction
because only a partial interest was transferred. TAMRA allowed such loans to qualify
for the charitable deduction if the charities use of the art is related to the organizations
tax-exempt purpose.108
The Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1989
The Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1989 (RRA)109 contained a small number of
amendments to the transfer taxes. The amendments to the generation-skipping tax
were of a technical nature.110 The gift tax was amended to allow the $100,000
exclusion for transfers to a noncitizen spouse only if the transfer would qualify for the
marital deduction if the spouse were a citizen of the United States.111
The estate tax changes in RRA modified the new rules enacted in TAMRA
concerning transfers to a spouse who is not a citizen of the United States. Under
TAMRA the estate tax marital deduction had been eliminated for transfers to a
noncitizen spouse unless a qualified domestic trust was utilized. The RRA allowed
the use of the marital deduction for transfers to a resident spouse if the spouse became
a citizen before the filing estate tax return.112
The RRA also modified the requirements of a qualified domestic trust. As
modified, a qualified domestic trust needed only to have one trustee who is a citizen
of the United States as opposed to the previous requirement that all trustees be
citizens.
The lone citizen trustee was required to have veto power over the
distributions from the trust. Under the RRA, the noncitizen spouse no longer needed
106 P.L. 100-647, § 5033.
107 P.L. 100-647, § 6151.
108 P.L. 100-647, § 1018.
109 P.L. 101-239, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. (1989).
110 See, P.L. 101-239, § 7811.
111 P.L. 101-239, § 7815(d)(1).
112 P.L. 101-239, § 7515(d)(5).

CRS-22
an income interest in the trust for the trust to be qualified, unless the trust was a
terminable interest.113
The RRA went a long way toward taxing qualified domestic trusts in the same
manner as the estates of citizen spouses by permitting certain estate tax benefits
against the estate tax required of a qualified domestic trust upon the death of the
noncitizen spouse. These benefits included alternate valuation, charitable deductions,
special use valuation, and certain capital gains provisions.114
The RRA provided that the denial of the marital deduction to a noncitizen spouse
will not be effective, during a three-year period from the effective date of the RRA,
against a noncitizen spouse who is domiciled in a country which has a treaty with the
United States which would provide a different result.115 The RRA set rules and time
tables for reforming trusts to qualify as qualified domestic trusts.116
The Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1990
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 (OBRA90)117 contained one
modification of the estate and gift tax provisions. OBRA90 completely altered the
transfer tax approach to the estate tax freeze which had been enacted in 1987 and
amended in 1988. The previous approach to tax avoidance through freeze transactions
was to include the at death value of property transferred in this manner in the estate
of the transferor as a retained interest.118
OBRA90 repealed section 2036(c)
retroactively to 1987, thus removing the freeze transaction from the estate tax retained
interest rules.119
Under OBRA90 the focus changed from the estate tax to the gift tax. The Act
added new rules for determining if the transfer constituted a gift and, if so, valuating
the transferred interest at the time of the freeze transaction for gift tax purposes.
These new rules were premised upon the general principal that the value of a residual
interest is determined by subtracting the value of any retained interests from the value
of the entire business entity, adjusted to reflect percentage of ownership or control.
OBRA90 changed the gift tax consequences of the freeze transaction by establishing
the value of the rights retained in the transaction at zero or a much lower value than
that which would have been found under prior law, thus greatly increasing the value
of the transferred (gifted) interest.120
113 P.L. 101-239, § 7815(d)(7)(A).
114 P.L. 101-239, § 7815(d)(7)(B).
115 P.L. 101-239, § 7815(d)(14).
116 P.L. 101-239, § 7815(d)(8).
117 P.L. 101-508, 101st Cong., 2nd Sess. (1990).
118 See, 26 U.S.C. § 2036.
119 P.L. 101-508, § 11601.
120 P.L. 101-505, § 11602.

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The Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1993
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993121 amended the transfer taxes
by restoring122 the top two tax rates to 53 percent and 55 percent, effective
retroactively to December 31, 1992.123
The Taxpayer Protection Act of 1997
The Taxpayer Protection Act of 1997 (TPA)124 amended all three of the transfer
taxes. The unified credit was increased for the first time since 1981. The terminology
was changed from unified credit to applicable exclusion amount. TPA phased in an
increase in this applicable exclusion amount from $600,000 in 1997 to $1,000,000 in
2006 (See, chart below.).125 While this amount was not indexed for inflation, TPA did
bring indexation to the estate and gift taxes for the first time. The following amounts
were indexed for inflation beginning in 1998: the $10,000 annual exclusion for gifts;
the $750,000 ceiling on special use valuation; the $1,000,000 generation-skipping tax
exemption; and the $1,000,000 ceiling on the value of a closely-held business eligible
for special low interest rates.126
TPA created a new exclusion from the estate tax for qualified family-owned
businesses. Under this exclusion the executor of a qualified estate was empowered
to elect special estate tax treatment for qualified “family-owned business interests.”
This exclusion was limited to a total of $1,300,000 when combined with the
applicable exclusion amount of the unified credit.127 Thus the family-owned business
exclusion was scheduled to decrease as the applicable exclusion amount increased.
121 P.L. 103-66, 103rd Cong., 1st Sess. (1993).
122 The top rate had dropped to 50 percent on December 31, 1992.
123 P.L. 103-66, § 13208.
124 P.L. 105-34, 105th Cong., 1st Sess. (1997).
125 P.L. 105-34, § 501. Instead of the code referring to an amount of credit and one having
to compute the size of taxable estate which would be covered by that size of credit, the code
now sets out the amount of the taxable estate which the unified credit will cover.
126 Id.
127 P.L. 105-34, § 502.

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Applicable Exclusion amount and Family-Owned Business
Exclusion
Year
Applicable Exclusion
Business Exclusion
Total Exclusion
amount
1998
$625,000
$675,000
$1,300,000
1999
$650,000
$650,000
$1,300,000
2000-1
$675,000
$625,000
$1,300,000
2002-3
$700,000
$600,000
$1,300,000
2004
$850,000
$450,000
$1,300,000
2005
$950,000
$350,000
$1,300,000
2006+
$1,000,000
$300,000
$1,300,000
The TPA defined “qualified estate” to be the estate of a U.S. citizen or resident of
which the aggregate value of the decedent’s qualified family-owned business interests
that are passed to qualified heirs exceeds 50 percent of the decedent’s adjusted gross
estate.128 “Qualified heir” was defined to include any individual who has been
employed in the business for at least 10 years prior to the date of the decedent’s death,
and members of the decedent’s family.129
A “qualified family-owned business
interest” was defined as any interest in a business with principal place of business in
the U.S. if ownership of the business is held at least 50 percent by one family, 70
percent by two families, or 90 percent by three families, as long as the decedent’s
family owns at least 30 percent of the business.130
To qualify for the beneficial treatment afforded family-owned businesses under
TPA, the decedent (or a member of his family) was required to have owned and
materially participated in the business for at least five of the eight years preceding the
death of the decedent. Also, each qualified heir was required to materially participate
in the business for at least five years of any eight year period within ten years
following the decedent’s death.131
128 P.L. 105-34, § 502. The formula for calculating this percentage was included in the
section.
129 P.L. 105-34, § 502. TPA incorporated by reference the definition of “family member”
from I.R.C. § 2032A(e)(1), which included the individual’s spouse, the individual’s
ancestors, and the lineal descendants of the individual or his spouse or parent (and the
spouses of such lineal descendants).
130 P.L. 105-34, § 502. Again, TPA utilized the definition of “family member” from I.R.C.
§ 2032A(e)(1).
131 P.L. 105-34, § 502. Recapture rules were included if the heirs failed to meet these
participation rules.

CRS-25
Other changes in the transfer taxes found in TPA included: a reduction in the
interest rate on installment payments of estate taxes attributable to closely held
businesses;132 denial of revaluation of gifts for estate tax purposes after the expiration
of the statute of limitations;133 repeal of the throwback rules applicable to domestic
trusts;134 reduction in the estate tax for certain land subject to permanent conservation
easements;135 and modification of the generation-skipping transfer tax for transfers to
individuals with deceased parents.136
The Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act
of 1998

In addition to clarifying and making several technical amendments to changes
enacted in 1997, the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of
1998137 contained one more substantive amendment to the estate tax. This amendment
converted the family-owned business exclusion into a deduction.138 The Act also
coordinated this new deduction with the unified credit to increase benefits to the
estates with qualified family-owned business interests as the unified credit increases.
The Act provided that if an executor elected to use the family-owned business
deduction, the estate tax liability would be calculated as if the estate were allowed a
maximum qualified business deduction of $675,000 and an applicable exclusion
amount of $625,000, regardless of the year in which the decedent died. If the estate
included less than the $675,000 of qualified family-owned business interests, the
applicable exclusion amount is increased on a dollar for dollar basis, limited to the
applicable exclusion amount generally available for the year of death.139
Phase Out and Repeal the Federal Estate and
Generation-Skipping Taxes
The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001140 generally
repeals the federal estate and generation-skipping transfer taxes at the end of the year
2009, provides for the phase out of these taxes over the period 2002 to 2009, lowers
and modifies the gift tax, provides new income tax carry-over basis rules for property
received from a decedent, and makes other general amendments which will be
applicable in the phase out period.
132 P.L. 105-34, § 503.
133 P.L. 105-34, § 506.
134 P.L. 105-34, § 507.
135 P.L. 105-34, § 508.
136 P.L. 105-34, § 511.
137 P.L. 105-206.
138 P.L. 105-206 § 6007(b)(1)(A).
139 P.L. 105-206 § 6007(b)(1)(B).
140 P.L. 107-16, 107th Cong., 1st Sess. (2001)

CRS-26
Repeal of The Estate and Generation-Skipping Transfer Taxes
The federal estate tax and the generation-skipping transfer tax shall not be
applied to decedents dying or generation-skipping transfers made after December 31,
2009.141
Phase Out of The Estate and Generation-Skipping Transfer
Taxes

The phase out of the estate tax is to be accomplished primarily by adjusting three
features of the tax. The top rate is to be gradually lowered.142 The applicable
exclusion amount is to be gradually raised.143 The credit for death taxes (estate or
inheritance taxes) paid to a State is to be gradually lowered and replaced by a
deduction for such taxes.144 Also, the 5% surtax used to recapture the benefits of the
graduated tax rates on taxable estates of over $10,000,000 is repealed,145 and, after the
applicable exclusion amount has surpassed the $1,300,000 level used to protect family
owned businesses, the family owned business deduction is repealed.146
141 P.L. 107-16, § 501. It should be noted that for purposes of compliance with the
Congressional Budget Act, P.L. 107-16, § 901 provides for sunset of its provisions at the
end of the year 2010. Therefore, absent Congressional action in the interim, the law
governing the estate, gift and generation-skipping transfer taxes would revert to the law
which was in place on June 7, 2001.
142 P.L. 107-16, § 511. The 50% rate in 2002 is to be the maximum rate on taxable estates
on the portion in excess of $2,500,000. The top rates in succeeding years are to be the
maximum rates on taxable estates on the portion in excess of $2,000,000.
143 P.L. 107-16, § 521. The applicable exclusion amount is a unified amount which can be
exempted from the gift and/or estate tax. After the applicable exclusion amount surpasses
$1,000,000 in the year 2004, the amount which may be exempted from gifts is limited to
$1,000,000, with the remainder of the exempt amount reserved to the taxable estate.
144 P.L. 107-16, § 531 and § 532. Currently the maximum allowable credit is the lesser of
the net tax paid to the State or the statutory ceiling of 26 U.S.C. § 2011(b) ( a percentage of
the taxable estate minus $60,000). Many States use the maximum credit allowed under §
2001(b) to constitute the State’s estate tax.
145 P.L. 107-16, § 511(b).
146 P.L. 107-16, § 521. The family owned business deduction allows $625,000 in value of
qualified family owned business to be deducted from the estate. If an estate opts to use this
deduction, the estate is limited to a $675,000 applicable exclusion amount, giving a total of
$1,300,000 which is deducted from the estate. Therefore, when the applicable exclusion
amount exceeds the $1,300,000 level, it will no longer be utilized and thus is repealed.

CRS-27
Schedule of Changes
Year
Top
Applicable
Credit for State Death Tax
Other Scheduled
Rate
Exclusion
Changes
Amount
2002
50%
$1,000,000
75% of current allowable
Repeal of 5%
credit.
surtax.
2003
49%
$1,000,000
50% of current allowable
credit.
2004
48%
$1,500,000
25% of current allowable
Repeal of family
credit.
owned business
deduction.
2005
47%
$1,500,000
Credit repealed. Deduction
--
for tax paid to State.
2006
46%
$2,000,000
Deduction for tax paid to
--
State.
2007
45%
$2,000,000
Deduction for tax paid to
--
State.
2008
45%
$2,000,000
Deduction for tax paid to
--
State.
2009
45%
$3,500,000
Deduction for tax paid to
--
State.
The phase out of the generation-skipping tax is accomplished primarily through
lowering the rates and increasing the lifetime exemption. The generation-skipping
transfer tax is imposed at the top rate of the estate tax.147 Therefore, when the top rate
of the estate tax is lowered under the Act, it has the affect of lowering the generation-
skipping tax as well. The lifetime exemption is increased by making the exemption
equal to the estate tax applicable exclusion amount.148
Modification of The Gift Tax
The gift tax was not repealed as originally proposed in order to protect the
integrity of the income tax. It was felt that, absent a gift tax, income producing
property could be gifted to taxpayers in lower brackets, sold, the taxes paid, and the
proceeds gifted back to the higher bracket taxpayer, thus avoiding great amounts of
income tax on the sale of capital assets.
The gift tax was modified by lowering the rates and increasing the applicable
exclusion amount. The top rate of the gift tax declines with the top rate of the estate
147 26 U.S.C. § 2641.
148 P.L. 107-16, § 521(c).

CRS-28
tax.149 After the repeal of the estate tax, the top gift tax rate is lowered to 35% of the
excess over $500,000.150 The applicable exclusion amount is raised to $1,000,000 in
the year 2002. This amount remains constant through the phase out period of the
estate tax and after the repeal of the estate tax.151 Thus, when the unified applicable
exclusion amount increases for the estate tax in the phase out period, only $1,000,000
may be used to cover lifetime transfers, i.e. gifts.
Basis Rules for Property Received from a Decedent
Technically the new basis rules are income tax rules, not estate tax rules. Basis
is used to determine gain on the sale of capital assets for income tax purposes. Often
basis and cost are equivalent. Generally, to determine taxable income from sale of a
capital asset, the basis in that asset is subtracted from the sale price. Currently, the
basis in property received from a decedent is a “stepped-up” basis.152 The inheritor
of property, instead of having the basis of the one from which he received the property
(a carry-over basis), has a basis in the property of the fair market value of the property
at the date of death of the decedent. The purpose of the stepped-up basis rule was to
avoid double taxation. The property had been subject to the estate tax. If the property
had a carry-over basis and was sold after inheritance, there would be a capital gain
subject to the income tax. The use of the stepped-up basis eliminates this capital gain
and thus the income tax on the sale. With the repeal of the estate tax, this need for
the stepped-up basis rules will be removed.
The Act repeals the stepped-up basis rule at the end of the year 2009 (when the
estate tax is repealed).153 The new basis rule will be that the basis in property received
from a decedent is the lesser of carry-over basis or the fair market value of the
property on the date of death of the decedent.154
Under the estate tax and the income tax stepped-up basis rules, an amount of the
gross estate was not subject to either tax.155 To compensate for the loss of the exempt
property with the repeal of the estate tax and the change to carry-over basis, the Act
provides for two amounts of property which may still receive stepped-up basis. Every
estate may allocate $1,300,000 basis increase to property in the taxable estate.156 In
addition to this general step-up, property passing to the spouse of the decedent may
149 P.L. 107-16, § 511(c), see discussion above.
150 P.L. 107-16, § 511(d).
151 P.L. 107-16, § 521.
152 26 U.S.C. § 1014.
153 P.L. 107-16, § 541.
154 P.L. 107-16, § 542.
155 The applicable exclusion amount and all property passing to the spouse under the
unlimited marital deduction would be not subject to the estate tax while still receiving the
stepped-up basis and thus avoiding the income tax on the subsequent sale of the property.
156 P.L. 107-16, § 542. A decedent who is a nonresident not a citizen is limited to a $60,000
step-up.

CRS-29
be allocated up to $3,000,000 basis increase.157 Each of these amounts is to be
indexed for inflation.
Other Amendments
The Act requires certain new returns to be filed to provide information for
administration of the new basis rules.158
The Act removes the mileage restrictions for the estate tax rule for creation of
conservation easements. This amendment applies to the estates of decedents dying
after December 31, 2000.159
The Act modifies the generation-skipping transfer tax allocation rules for certain
lifetime transfers to a trust.160
Conclusion
The federal system of transfer taxes has represented an important part of the
federal tax structure for the past 85 years, not so much in terms of revenue produced,
but in terms of impact on individual taxpayers and their personal and business
decisions. The history of the estate, gift, and generation-skipping taxes shows a mixed
desire to raise revenue and to promote certain social goals. These goals include: (1)
reducing large estates and inheritances; while (2) alleviating the burden on small and
moderate sized estates and facilitating the continued operation of family businesses.
The phase out and repeal of the estate and generation-skipping transfer taxes meets
the second of these goals, but leaves the first unaddressed, at least from perspective
of tax policy.
There are three primary categories of proposed legislation in the area of transfer
taxes in the 108th Congress. As noted above, the repeal of the estate and generation-
skipping taxes is not permanent. One category would make the repeal permanent
(H.R. 8, H.R. 57, H.R. 139, and H.R. 158 would make the repeal of these taxes
permanent. H.R. 210, H.R. 407, and H.R. 1612 would make all provisions of P.L.
107-16 permanent). Another category would accelerate the repeal of these transfer
taxes (H.R. 51, S. 13, S.96 and S. 169). The third would reinstate these taxes at lower
rates and/or in a manner more considerate of family owned business (H.R. 396, H.R.
2477, H.R. 2480, H.R. 2481, H.R. 2502, H.R. 2513, H.R. 2532, H.R. 2610, H.R.
2682, S. 34, and S. 135). The House passed H.R. 8 on June 18, 2003.161
157 P.L. 107-16, § 542.
158 P.L. 107-16, § 542, amending 26 U.S.C. §§ 6018 & 6019.
159 P.L. 107-16, § 551.
160 P.L. 107-16, §§ 561 to 563.
161
149 Cong. Rec. H5513 (daily ed. June 18, 2003). For summaries of 108th Congress
transfer tax legislation, see, CRS Report RL31776, Estate Tax Legislation in the 108th
Congress
, by Nonna A. Noto.