
Media Advisory | |
| For Immediate Release April 4 , 2001 | |
House Repeals Estate Tax |
WASHINGTON, DC (April 4, 2001) -- A group of black millionaires led by billionaire founder of the Black Entertainment Network, Robert L. Johnson, bought ads today in The New York Times and the Washington Post calling for abolition of the so-called death tax. As expected, the House of Representatives has approved the $192 billion dollar tax cut bill that would phase out estate taxes by 2011.
"Farmers, small business owners and newly wealthy groups, like these black millionaires, understand that the estate tax is a triple, and in some cases a fourth, level of taxation," said Bruce Bartlett, NCPA Senior Fellow. And, according to Bartlett, there are other severe economic problems with estate taxes:
Statistics from the Internal Revenue Service (1999) show that most estate taxes are paid by estates smaller than $5 million and two-thirds are paid by estates smaller than $10 million.
"Mr. Johnson and his colleagues are to be congratulated for supporting the repeal of the death tax. In fact, I look forward to a debate between his group and those white millionaires who signed an ad in The New York Times supporting the estate tax on February 8," Bartlett said. "BET, Johnson's television network, should televise it."
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