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Preserving the family fortune: With the phaseout of the estate tax far from certain, life insurers stress the need for the wealthy to protect their assets. (Life/Health: Estate Planning).


Insurance offsets uncertainty. So even as Congress gradually repeals the estate tax, with plans to eliminate it in 2010, there is still plenty of uncertainty to go around, and the life insurance industry is already adjusting and selling policies for estate-planning purposes.

The fuss about Congress' action last spring to phase out estate taxes hurt life insurance sales last year, particularly those designed for the estate-planning market, such as survivorship survivorship n. the right to receive full title or ownership due to having survived another person. Survivorship is particularly applied to persons owning real property or other assets, such as bank accounts or stocks, in "joint tenancy.  policies, which insure two lives and pay upon the death of the second. But the events of Sept. 11 spurred sales of life products in general, and agents and brokers have found better footing in the new sales environment as they work with estate-planning clients.

A healthy skepticism that the estate tax will never really die is helping to fuel a rebound rebound (rē´bownd),
n/v 1. a recovery from illness.
n 2. an outbreak of fresh reflex activity after withdrawal of a stimulus

rebound adjective
 in life sales. As recently as 27 years ago, government took up to 77%, less exemptions, of a recently deceased's assets. While an eventual full repeal The Annulment or abrogation of a previously existing statute by the enactment of a later law that revokes the former law.

The revocation of the law can either be done through an express repeal
 is law, many in the life industry doubt Congress will leave that law intact. (See Near-Death Experience near-death experience, phenomenon reported by some people who have been clinically dead, then returned to life. Descriptions of the experience differ slightly in detail from person to person, but usually share some basic elements: a feeling of being outside one's ," page 98.) And even if it remains unaltered, the estate tax is scheduled to reappear reappear
Verb

to come back into view

reappearance n

Verb 1. reappear - appear again; "The sores reappeared on her body"; "Her husband reappeared after having left her years ago"
 in 2011 at the pre-2001 top rate of 55%.

"There was a paralysis paralysis or palsy (pôl`zē), complete loss or impairment of the ability to use voluntary muscles, usually as the result of a disorder of the nervous system.  last year for a time, but we saw a turnaround in September, October and November," said Michael Gilotti, executive vice president at Phoenix Variable Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn. "Now Phoenix is having a banner year in life sales. Life sales have never been better for Phoenix in January and February."

Gilotti said buyers have been motivated this year by both traditional reasons for purchasing life insurance and by estate-planning concerns. Uncertainty about not only estate planning Estate Planning

The overall planning of a person's wealth, including the preparation of a will and the planning of taxes after the individual's death.

Notes:
Contrary to popular belief, estate planning involves much more than preparing a will, and it is not only for the
, but the effects of terrorism and the economic downturn, have caused many clients and prospects to hold financial reviews with their advisers, he said.

Add to those motivations the fact that Phoenix and its advisers encourage prospects to view estate planning as more than estate-tax planning. "There's been so much discussion about estate-tax repeal," said Richard Martin The name Richard Martin can refer to different people:
  • Richard Martin (politician) (1754–1834)(aka "Humanity Dick"), an Irish MP and campaigner against cruelty to animals
  • Richard Martin (footballer) (born 1987), an English footballer
  • Richard Martin (actor), b.
, vice president in advanced marketing for the Phoenix Cos. "There's been a constant buzz about estate taxes, but we don't really know if they will ever be fully repealed. Now we're beyond the paralysis and are concentrating on how people can achieve their life's goals."

Here to Stay

Estate planning with life insurance has not gone away and should not go away, said Ted Kurlowicz, the Charles E. Drimal professor of estate planning at American College American College is the name of:
  • American College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
  • The American College in Madurai, Tamil Nadu, India
  • The American College of the Immaculate Conception, Leuven (also known as Louvain), Belgium
, Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr (brĭn mär), uninc. town (1990 est. pop. 10,000), Montgomery co., SE Pa., a residential suburb of Philadelphia. It is the seat of Bryn Mawr College (for women), opened in 1885 by the Society of Friends. , Pa. "There are all kinds of new issues along with the basic uncertainty, and the risk of not having coverage is pretty severe," he said.

For example, state taxes on inheritances and estates may survive a repeal of the federal estate tax, Kurlowicz said. Some states' inheritance taxes inheritance tax, assessment made on the portion of an estate received by an individual; it differs from an

estate tax, which is a tax levied on an entire estate before it is distributed to individuals.
 are independent of federal rules, and even those that are based on federal estate-tax rules could continue to exist, he said. All states currently have the credit estate tax, also known as the "pickup" or "sponge" tax, which allows them to collect an amount equal to the maximum credit permitted on federal tax returns for estate-tax payments to states. This tax is scheduled to be eliminated in 2005 under provisions of last year's Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act, the law that eventually repeals federal estate taxes. But states may decide to create separate inheritance taxes to replace the lost revenue, Kurlowicz said. Arizona, Georgia, Minnesota, New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, Rhode Island Rhode Island, island, United States
Rhode Island, island, 15 mi (24 km) long and 5 mi (8 km) wide, S R.I., at the entrance to Narragansett Bay. It is the largest island in the state, with steep cliffs and excellent beaches.
, Virginia and Wisconsin already have done this, and others will presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 follow suit, he said.

The largest estates are subject to a marginal rate of 16% under the existing state estate-tax credit. "Even if the federal estate tax is repealed, the largest estates in states that maintain the prior pickup-tax levels will continue to pay state death taxes at a 16% marginal rate," Kurlowicz said. "It is important to keep up to date on the developments for state wealth-transfer taxes in any state in which a client might be domiciled dom·i·cile  
n.
1. A residence; a home.

2. One's legal residence.

v. dom·i·ciled, dom·i·cil·ing, dom·i·ciles

v.tr.
1.
 or own property at the time of his or her death."

Life insurance is valuable for estate planning, because it enlarges an estate, thereby providing money to pay estate taxes without diminishing the size of the estate. Kurlowicz said he doubts that many people who own life insurance for estate-planning purposes will cash in their policies. "If you terminate it before you know the final provisions [of estate-tax law], you're taking a risk you shouldn't be taking," he said. Some people might contemplate changing to an accumulation-type of investment if the exemption limits continue to rise as scheduled--from $1 million this year to $1.5 million in 2004, $2 million in 2006 and $3.5 million in 2009, he said. Of course, the exemption would fall back to $1 million in 2011 and ensuing en·sue  
intr.v. en·sued, en·su·ing, en·sues
1. To follow as a consequence or result. See Synonyms at follow.

2. To take place subsequently.
 years if the estate tax returns, but Kurlowicz said he doubts Congress would allow the big exemption increases to happen without clarifying the ultimate result. Even if people hold on to their life policies, and the estate tax is eventually eliminated, the risk of continuing to pay for the policy "is that your loved ones loved ones nplseres mpl queridos

loved ones nplproches mpl et amis chers

loved ones love npl
 get a lot more, and that's not such a bad risk," he said.

Wealthy Clients

Gary Cook, an estate planner Estate Planner, a professional that creates an estate plan. This professional works with an estate owner to maximize their goals. This is a legal and tax specialty for an attorney or an accountant.  in Irving, Texas Irving (pronounced 'er-ving') is a city located in the U.S. state of Texas within Dallas County. According to the 2000 U.S. Census, the city population was 191,615; the 2006 estimate was 201,927 according to the North Central Texas Council of Governments, and 196,084 according to , said he doesn't expect to see the estate tax eliminated, except perhaps for the one scheduled year. "With the monetary demands the government has now, it will be looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 revenue streams," said Cook, director of financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
 at McQueary Henry Bowles & Troy, a 76 year-old commercial insurance agency. "I'm estimating a family would be able to pass the first $4 million to $5 million estate-tax-free. Fortunately, we're in a marketplace of clients worth $10 million or more, so they still need planning and assistance."

Cook said he has seen a "resurgence re·sur·gence  
n.
1. A continuing after interruption; a renewal.

2. A restoration to use, acceptance, activity, or vigor; a revival.
" in estate planning now that clients have "figured Out" that estate taxes probably won't go away. They are particularly interested now in leveraging life insurance through the use of trusts, which buy the life insurance, he said. Clients fund their trusts with the maximum allowable gift without incurring gift taxes--$11,000 this year, up from $10,000 previously The trust borrows money to pay the premium, and the trust pays off the note when the insured dies. "By utilizing this strategy, we eliminate a lot of gifting issues," said Cook.

His wealthy clients also are showing interest in buying life insurance for foundations, Cook said. "It's a means for individuals through private placements or leveraged life insurance to fund family foundations or other foundations for very little expense," he said. The foundations his clients choose commonly benefit children's cancer centers, churches and other religious organizations.

Many of Cook's clients are looking to life insurance to fund the new capital-gains tax in 2010 created by the new carryover-basis rules. Currently, an inherited inherited

received by inheritance.


inherited achondroplastic dwarfism
see achondroplastic dwarfism.

inherited combined immunodeficiency
see combined immune deficiency syndrome (disease).
 asset's cost basis is "stepped up" to the value at the time of the owner's death, but beginning in 2010, the cost basis will be the value of the asset at the time it was acquired. Unlike estate taxes, which must be paid within nine months of the deceased's death, the capital-gains tax becomes due in the year the beneficiary disposes of the asset.

But Cook said heirs of small-business owners still will face a liquidity need because much of the wealth is tied up in privately held stock. Not only is there less of a market for such stock, but there's often a fire sale, because the only people interested in acquiring the business are competitors. "We've seen circumstances like that discounted 60% to 70%," said Cook. The heirs of the owner of a closely held A phrase used to describe the ownership, management, and operation of a corporation by a small group of people.

In a closely held corporation, the same people often act as shareholders, directors, and officers, and no outside investors exist.
 business potentially suffer the most without planning, he added.

Diane M. Pearson, a fee-only certified financial planner Certified Financial Planner (CFP)

A person who has passed examinations accredited by the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, showing that the person is able to manage a client's banking, estate, insurance, investment, and tax affairs.
 at Legend Financial Advisors in Pittsburgh, said the planned phaseout phase·out  
n.
A gradual discontinuation.
 of estate taxes probably has increased estate planning at her firm, but not necessarily the use of life insurance, since the average net worth of her firm's clients is about $1.5 million. "Anyone with a net worth of $4 million or more still needs life insurance, and probably within an irrevocable Unable to cancel or recall; that which is unalterable or irreversible.


IRREVOCABLE. That which cannot be revoked.
     2. A will may at all times be revoked by the same person who made it, he having a disposing mind; but the moment the testator is
 life insurance trust," she said.

"Our clients don't believe the estate tax will go away," she said. "Those with net worth of $4 million and more will keep their insurance. Those with $3 million and less are not as worried about keeping insurance. They're not getting rid of it, but not as many are forming irrevocable life insurance trusts and putting insurance into them."

Pearson's focus since last spring has been to make sure her clients' estate plans are updated to reflect changes in the exemption amount and potential repeal of the estate tax. "That's especially important if we haven't looked at documents for 10 years or more," she said. "Everything has changed dramatically, especially the clients' net worths. People are carrying a lot of gain from that five-year bull market, even with the downturn that followed."

Balanced Assets

One of the biggest mistakes people make is to put so much of their assets into joint accounts. Married couples should ensure that their assets are balanced--with some assets in each spouse's name--so they can each take maximum advantage of the increasing estate-tax exemption and the generation-skipping trust tax-exemption amounts, she said.

She also is encouraging people to keep track of the basis of their assets, including capital improvements to real estate, to make it easier for executors to prove the basis of property in an estate. But Pearson admits to doubts that the planned capital-gains tax will ever take effect. "Due to the sunset provision A statutory provision providing that a particular agency, benefit, or law will expire on a particular date, unless it is reauthorized by the legislature.

Federal and state governments grew dramatically in the 1950s and 1960s.
 after 2010, a majority of estate planners believe Congress will change the law before we get to 2010," she said. 'The sunset provision will never occur, and we'll probably never get to 2010 with the estate tax gone away. We'll get to a point where we'll put a cap on this, probably a unified credit unified credit

A credit used against federal taxes due on estates and large gifts. Under current law, the unified credit is sufficient to offset taxes on values of approximately $1 million in estates and large gifts.
 exemption at $2 million or $3 million."

If the capital-gains tax begins to look more likely, Pearson said clients could take steps to shift those assets out of their estates through gifting, charitable contributions charitable contribution n. in taxation, a contribution to an organization which is officially created for charitable, religious, educational, scientific, artistic, literary, or other good works.  or trust vehicles.

Phoenix Cos. is among several insurers over the past year to give buyers of estate-planning products some flexibility should the estate tax be repealed. Under Phoenix's "Life-Plan" program, buyers of survivorship universal life and variable universal life insurance The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
 may increase-on their fifth, 10th and 15th anniversaries-their coverage without a medical exam, reduce their coverage without a surrender charge Surrender Charge

A fee levied on a life insurance policyholder upon cancellation of his or her life insurance policy. The fee is used to cover the costs of keeping the insurance policy on the insurance provider's books.
 or exchange their policy for an annuity without a surrender charge. They also will be able to convert some of the death benefit into single-life coverage without a medical exam or surrender charge. Among other companies to offer similar options are Lincoln Life Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn., and Manulife Financial Manulife Financial (NYSE: MFC, TSX: MFC, SEHK: 945, PSE: MFC), also known as The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company, is a major Canadian insurance company and financial services provider. , Boston. John Hancock Life Insurance Co., Boston, and New York Life Insurance Co. also have launched products to address certain concerns about estate-tax changes.

Hartford Financial Services Group on April 1 became the most recent company to offer a free estate-tax repeal rider. Under terms of the rider, policyholders can surrender certain policies without charge if the federal estate tax disappears in 2011, and Hartford will pay a benefit equal to the policy's account value, less any indebtedness. The rider is available on Stag Variable Life Last Survivor Life II, Stag Protector protector /pro·tec·tor/ (-tek´ter) a substance in a catalyst that prolongs the rate of activity in the latter.  Variable Universal Life, Stag Universal Life and Solution Last Survivor Universal Life.

Phoenix, however, has gone beyond tweaking tweaking Vox populi Fine-tuning to produce optimal results  its products under the strategic part of its LifePlan program. The company has created packages of strategies to help its producers address the accumulation, preservation and transfer needs of its high-net-worth clients. The strategies address family legacies, supplemental retirement plans, spousal spou·sal  
adj.
1. Of or relating to marriage; nuptial.

2. Of or relating to a spouse.

n.
Marriage; nuptials. Often used in the plural.
 lifetime support, business succession, retirement distributions and education funding for children and grandchildren GRANDCHILDREN, domestic relations. The children of one's children. Sometimes these may claim bequests given in a will to children, though in general they can make no such claim. 6 Co. 16. . They also address providing for special-needs individuals, charitable funding and creation of trusts.

Most insurers help their producers address such needs, of course, but Gilotti said the difference in Phoenix's program is "the packaging aspect" and the materials around it. "They provide a template (1) A pre-designed document or data file formatted for common purposes such as a fax, invoice or business letter. If the document contains an automated process, such as a word processing macro or spreadsheet formula, then the programming is already written and embedded in the  for a producer to follow," he said. "Without having something to follow, the nuances would be more difficult to grasp." He added that the company has been working collaboratively on the project for the past few years and that it is a process more than a product.

Using Annuities

Phoenix calls its latest strategy "Phoenix Max." It is designed to help people who have finished the asset-accumulation phase of life to use life insurance to preserve assets through an annuity. The idea is that gains in an annuity are taxable to an estate, so why not make use of the tax advantages to pay for life insurance while the owner is taking distributions? The life insurance ultimately provides heirs with death benefits free of income tax, and free of estate tax if the policy is in a proper kind of trust.

Gilotti said the company chose annuities as the funding source for the plan, because it sells through banks and broker-dealers, and there is a lot of money in those distribution outlets. The second reason is that there are factors in annuity income that make it beneficial for this approach. One is that annuitized streams of income are dependable and are paid on a regular basis, and insurers can set up automatic payments for the life product. Another is that unlike an interest payment, dividend or capital gain, a portion of every annuity payment is a return of principal already taxed. "That means it puts more spendable income into your pocket so you can use less of your asset on buying insurance, or buy more insurance," said Gilotti.

An annuity also offers a multitude of payout pay·out  
n.
1. The act or an instance of paying out.

2. A percentage of corporate earnings that is paid as dividends to shareholders.
 options, and a lifetime option is especially appropriate for purchase of permanent insurance. Other options might be useful for alimony alimony, in law, allowance for support that an individual pays to his or her former spouse, usually as part of a divorce settlement. It is based on the common law right of a wife to be supported by her husband, but in the United States, the Supreme Court in 1979  or debt reduction, he said.

Phoenix also reasoned that financial advisers who sell annuities are licensed to sell life insurance, so it is natural to couple the two products, Gilotti said.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Gilotti, there is anecdotal evidence anecdotal evidence,
n information obtained from personal accounts, examples, and observations. Usually not considered scientifically valid but may indicate areas for further investigation and research.
 that the idea of packaging strategies and offering escape options on estate-planning products helped Phoenix to break the estate planning paralysis that existed last year. "We're glad to have them, and our distribution partners are, too," he said.

The development of an estate-tax calculator calculator or calculating machine, device for performing numerical computations; it may be mechanical, electromechanical, or electronic. The electronic computer is also a calculator but performs other functions as well.  also has helped, said Phoenix's Martin. Used by producers, the calculator is a spreadsheet that projects estate-tax liability under certain assumptions.

Liquidity Problems

Even if the federal estate tax is repealed, some people will continue to benefit from the liquidity and wealth replacement that life insurance can provide, Kurlowicz said in a recent paper, "Life Insurance and Estate Planning in the Post EGTRRA EGTRRA Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (also known as EGTRAA 2001)  Environment." In addition to estate taxes that states may impose, large estates can bear substantial costs for executors, attorneys, accountants and appraisers-even for nonprobate assets. "Generally speaking, the larger the estate, the greater the complexity and need for costly professional help to settle the estate, he said. "One advantage of life insurance is that it avoids probate probate (prō`bāt), in law, the certification by a court that a will is valid. Probate, which is governed by various statutes in the several states of the United States, is required before the will can take effect.  if it is paid to a named beneficiary."

Kurlowicz said liquidity problems can arise in many ways other than just trying to sell a closely held business. Wealthy individuals may own unproductive real estate that the family wishes to keep or expensive personal property, such as artwork, home furnishings furnishings

the extra type or quantity of hair on the head, tail, ears or legs, specified for a particular breed. For example, the feathers in setters, the beard in Bearded collies, the eyebrows in Schnauzers.
, automobiles or other collectibles. Such assets may be unmarketable or very difficult to sell in the short time required to settle an estate, or they may be treasured items, Kurlowicz said.

In the business world, the need for buy-sell agreements buy-sell agreement n. a contract among the owners of a business which provides terms for their purchase of a withdrawing partner's or stockholder's interest in the enterprise.  would not be changed in the absence of an estate tax, he added.

In addition, life insurance could help to resolve unexpected dilemmas that families may be saddled with due to the estate-tax phaseout law. These choices may center on when a family member ought to die.

"Will family members keep the estate owner on life support until 2009 or 2010?" Kurlowicz asked in his paper. "Will the family members terminate life support prior to 2011? Will attorneys develop Advance Medical Directives advance medical directive Advance directive, see there  (living wills) or Health Care Power of Attorney forms to permit decisions to be made based on tax consequences? Will the media have a field day with the obvious public-policy nightmare this law creates as time grows closer to the critical dates? I would guess that all of these circumstances will occur to some degree."

Under current law, a large estate would save $675,000 if the client alive in 2008 survives to Jan. 1, 2009, Kurlowicz calculated. A larger savings would result if the wealthy individual lived to 2010, when the estate tax is to disappear, and the law's sunset provision "would seem to provide a tax incentive" for the person to die before 2011, when the 55% rate is to return along with a unified-credit equivalent of $1 million.

Kurlowicz added that he and other experts do not expect the law to survive-there's too much uncertainty. [BR]

[GRAPH OMITTED]
Ups and Downs of the Modern Federal Estate Tax

Since the federal estate tax was re-enacted in 1916, rates have
increased and decreased. Often scheduled drops in rates have been
derailed due to intervening economic changes.


1916       Increas     Budget pressures from World Wad I
                       force Congress to re-enact an
                       estate tax. Rates run from
                       1% to 10%.

1935       Increase    Popular pressure for the
                       redistribution of wealth raises
                       the maximum estate tax rate to
                       70%.

1948-1975  Increase    Miscellaneous legislation sees
                       estate and gift tax rates as high
                       as 77% and 57.5%, respectively.

1976       Decrease    Modern gift and estate tax
                       legislation adopted. Rates drop to
                       70%. The Unified Tax Credit (UTC)
                       is adopted, initially sheltering
                       $175,625 of property.

1976-1980  Decrease    Years of debate over a
                       controversial 1976 provision to
                       eliminate the long-standing
                       setp-up in tax basis to the
                       date-of-death value. Finally
                       eliminated in 1980, only to
                       resurface in the Death Tax Repeal
                       Act of 2000.

1980s      Increases/  Scheduled rate drops are frozen
           Decreased   in 1987 at 55% and never progress
                       further. UTC now shelters
                       $600,000. Qualified retirement
                       plans, once completely exempt from
                       estate taxes, lose their exemption
                       and face a 15% estate tax
                       surcharge for accumulations over
                       certain amounts in 1997.

1990s      Increases/  Various proposals surface
           Decreases   regarding the UTC. They range
                       from reducing its shelter value
                       to $200,000 to increasing its
                       shelter value. Ultimately
                       scheduled to increase to
                       $1,000,000 of shelter value.
                       5% surcharge added in large
                       estate to phase out the UTC.
                       Effective rate for estates
                       subject to phaseout is 60%
                       Proposals surface in late 1990s
                       to repeal estate taxes.

2001       Increases/  UTC increases fro $675,000 in
           Decreases   2001 to $3.5 million by 2009.
                       Top rate drops to 45% by 2007.
                       Estate tax and generation-skipping
                       tax repealed in 2010. Lifetime
                       gifts in excess of $1 million
                       taxed at top income tax rate.
                       Step-up in basis rules repealed
                       in 2010 and replaced by modified
                       carry-over basis rules. "Sunset"
                       provision requires entire law to
                       be repealed, effective Dec. 31,
                       2010. Thus, the law that was in
                       effect on June 6, 2001, will be
                       reinstated as if the "new" law
                       never existed.

Source: The Phoenix Cos.
Maximum Estate Tax Rates

The rate for the top estate-tax bracket will fall to 45% by 2009, the
year before the proposed elimation of the tax.


2002  50%
2003  49%
2004  48%
2005  47%
2006  46%
2007  45%
2008  45%
2009  45%
2010  0%
2011  55%
2012  55%
2013  55%
2014  55%
2015  55%

Note: The rates shown do not include the 5% surcharge on estates in
excess of $10 million and less than $17,184,000.

Source: Phoenix Life Insurance Co.

Note: Table made from line graph


RELATED ARTICLE: Estate-Planning Factors to Consider

* How large is the client's estate?

* What is the likelihood that the client and/or the client's spouse will survive to the date of the anticipated repeal?

* What is the potential exposure to capital gains or income taxes if the basis step-up is repealed?

* Are there special items in the estate (such as business interest, real estate or collectibles) that are targeted for specific heirs?

* What is the possibility of significant state inheritance or estate taxes where the client is domiciled or owns property?

* Will the estate be required to pay significant probate or other administrative expenses?

Source: Ted Kurlowicz, The American college
COPYRIGHT 2002 A.M. Best Company, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Comment:Preserving the family fortune: With the phaseout of the estate tax far from certain, life insurers stress the need for the wealthy to protect their assets. (Life/Health: Estate Planning).
Author:Panko, Ron
Publication:Best's Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2002
Words:3386
Previous Article:Bound by red tape: Politics and regulatory procedure hinder industry attempts to set fair rates, make insurance prices affordable and handle claims...
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