Title
Intergenerational Wealth Transfer and the Need to Revive and Metamorphose the Israeli Estate Tax
Abstract
This article suggests enacting an accession tax instead of the estate duty – which was repealed in Israel in 1981. This suggestion evolves from historical and normative explorations of the tension between perceptions of familial intergenerational property rights and justifications for the “death tax,” as termed by its opponents, i.e., estate and inheritance tax. First, the Article explores this tension as expressed in the history of the Israeli Estate Duty Law. This chronological survey reveals a move from the State’s taken-for-granted interest in revenue justifying the Law’s enactment in 1949; moving on to the “needy widow” and “poor orphan” in whose name the tax was attacked during the years 1959–1964, continuing to the abolition of the tax in 1981 in the name of efficiency and the right of the testator to transfer his wealth to his family, and finally cumulating with the targeting of tycoon dynasties that characterizes the recent calls for reintroducing the tax. Next, based on the rich literature on the subject, the Article maps the arguments for and against intergenerational wealth transfer taxation, placing the Israeli case in larger philosophical, political, and pragmatic contexts. Lastly, it associates the ideas of accession tax and “social inheritance” with inspirational sources for rethinking a realistic wealth transfer taxation to bridge the gap between notions of intergenerational familial rights and intergenerational social justice.
Disciplines
Family Law | Law | Law and Society | Legal History, Theory and Process | Tax Law
Date of this Version
8-2014
Recommended Citation
Daphna Hacker, "Intergenerational Wealth Transfer and the Need to Revive and Metamorphose the Israeli Estate Tax" (August 2014). Tel Aviv University Law Faculty Papers. Working Paper 187.
http://law.bepress.com/taulwps/art187
Included in
Family Law Commons, Law and Society Commons, Legal History, Theory and Process Commons, Tax Law Commons