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Inheritance tax move won't save prudent a penny

A doubling of the inheritance tax threshold should be welcomed by middle Britain, but will not save prudent people a penny, experts say.

Posted: Wednesday, October 10, 2007, 11:22 (BST)
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"This change is welcome because it will save couples the need to jump through hoops when planning their wills," said Ian Maston, director of inheritance tax at accountant Chiltern.

Chancellor Alistair Darling said the change would cut the number of estates falling into the IHT net to just 3 percent.

The total allowance for married couples and civil partnerships will rise to 700,000 pounds by 2010 and, in future years, the government will take into account both house prices and inflation when setting IHT thresholds, he added.

House prices have soared by 219 percent since 1995/96, according to the Halifax, and the announcement ensures that the threshold -- for couples who would have failed to take tax planning steps -- has kept pace with house price inflation for many UK households.

Just 3 percent of owner-occupied properties are worth more than 600,000 pounds, compared with 80 percent worth 300,000 pounds or more.

Inheritance tax revenue raised in 2006/07 was a record 3.6 billion pounds and the rule change is expected to cut that by one billion pounds in 2008/09, rising to 1.4 billion in 2010/11.

The Conservative party said last week it would raise the IHT threshold to one million pounds, and some tax experts criticised the Labour government for not going further.

"Public expectation has been raised over the last few weeks that this unwelcome tax would be changed to allow a threshold of one million pounds and a possible reduction in the tax to 30 percent," said Jerry McLoughlin, of Punter Southall Financial Management.

"The government has missed an opportunity by not going further, particularly as it is costing them little to increase to the new threshold."

The move will also not help unmarried or non-civil partnership couples or siblings who live together.

Sisters Joyce and Sybil Burden -- born in 1918 and 1925 -- have spent decades fighting rules which mean that when one of them dies, the other will face a large IHT bill and may be forced to sell their home in Wiltshire.

They took their case to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg -- prompted by the introduction of new British rights for gay and lesbian couples -- but lost by a majority of four to three in a judgment last December. They are now appealing that ruling.



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