(Bloomberg News) On paper, a mere ten percentage points and 2,860 wealthy taxpayers separate Republicans and Democrats in the fight over taxing multimillion-dollar estates. The political differences loom larger.

As the U.S. Congress moves to reinstate the estate tax next year with a top 35% rate, the lowest in 80 years, Republicans say they've made concessions after seeking to abolish the levy, while Democrats insist the new rules would benefit the nation's wealthiest households at a time of record income inequality.

The compromise by President Barack Obama and Senate Republicans to extend Bush-era tax cuts would subject 3,600 U.S. estates to any tax, of an estimated 2.6 million projected deaths in 2011, according to estimates. House Democrats support an alternative that would collect a higher rate of tax from 6,460 multimillionaires. While that's a difference of just 2,860 taxpayers, Democrats see the compromise as an affront to the philosophy of taxation based on ability to pay.

"Their concern is the estate tax is and has long been the most progressive tax in the system," said Columbia University law professor Michael Graetz, who wrote a 2005 book on efforts to repeal the estate tax. "It's symbolic for the Democrats of the difficulty of raising much revenue at the top of the income scale."

Estate Tax

The Senate yesterday passed the 35% top rate by a vote of 81-19. House Democrats plan to counter with a vote to reinstate the estate tax permanently with a 45% top rate and a $3.5 million per-person exclusion, said House Rules Committee Chairwoman Louise Slaughter, a New York Democrat.

A similar bill passed the House last year and died in the Senate. The House proposal would generate $14 billion more in revenue over two years than the provision in the current tax measure, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation.

Few households pay the estate tax because the law allows millions of dollars to be bequeathed tax-free. The Senate bill sets a tax-free allowance for 2011 and 2012 of $5 million per person and $10 million per couple. According to the Congressional Research Service, that exemption would mean only 0.14% of households would pay estate tax.

The number of total estates affected is higher. In 2011, for example, the estates of about 9,100 people will have enough assets to have to file a tax return under the Senate bill, according to an analysis by the Tax Policy Center, a joint venture of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution, two Washington research groups.

No Tax

 

About 60%, or 5,500, will owe no tax because the deceased individual would have transferred assets to a surviving spouse or donated them to charity in lieu of writing a check to the U.S. Treasury Department. One of the policy rationales for an estate tax is to encourage charitable giving, Graetz said.

Of the estimated 3,600 U.S. taxable estates, 440 will have at least half of their gross assets tied to farms and businesses, according to the Tax Policy Center. Just 50 would qualify as "small farms and businesses," the center estimates.

Neal Weber, managing director in charge of RSM McGladrey's Washington National Tax Office, said the number of tax returns filed obscures the fact that many minimize their estate tax exposure through trusts to pass along underappreciated assets before death. The Senate measure creates more opportunities to do this in 2011 and 2012 by raising the lifetime tax-free gift allowance to $10 million per couple, up from $2 million now.

"There are thousands and thousands of taxpayers who are doing estate planning," Weber said.

Antony Davies, an economics professor at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, studied 10 years of estate tax returns and estimates that as many as 170,000 households have enough wealth, under the Senate bill, to require estate-planning assistance. About 85,000 have assets such as non-corporate or closely held stock, real estate partnerships, or farm equipment, he said.

The estate tax "diverts resources" that could be used to expand businesses or hire workers, he said.

Since 1916

The estate tax has been part of the law since the income tax was ratified in 1916. It was targeted for abolition in the mid-1990s by congressional Republicans and activist groups such as Americans for Tax Reform, based in Washington. Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon also tried in the 1920s to abolish the tax.

In 2001, Congress agreed to phase out the estate tax as part of President George W. Bush's tax-cut proposal. It has disappeared temporarily in 2010, with a capital gains tax on some inherited assets taking its place, and is set to return with a 55% rate and a $1 million tax-free allowance in 2011. About 43,540 estates would be subject to tax in 2011 if Congress doesn't act, according to the Tax Policy Center.

James Cody, director of estate and trust services for Harris myCFO Inc. in Menlo Park, California, said groups opposed to the tax have been divided between business owners who sought to secure the highest possible tax-free allowance and those with a higher net worth who wanted the lowest possible rate.

'Modest Benefit'

"If the estate is $100 million, the extra exemption is a modest benefit and not going to change their behavior that much," Cody said. A $100 million estate would face an extra $10.2 million in taxes under the Democrats' proposal.

Among those who favor repeal of the estate tax, some are willing to accept the 35% rate for now. Dick Patten, president of the American Family Business Institute, a Washington group founded by wealthy families to fight the levy, said voting for the compromise wouldn't violate the "No Death Tax" pledge signed by 130 Republican lawmakers and Senator Joe Manchin, a newly elected Democrat from West Virginia.

"The pledge is for permanent, total repeal, although not necessarily at once," Patten said. "If the death tax has to be dismantled piece by piece, we'll do that."