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Long-term care agents defend insurance |
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Kitces wrote an analysis on the new provisions for
a financial book publisher. I invited him to put his findings into
lay terms, and this is what he told me:
"As a minor technical statement, you don't take
the money out of the annuity; it's deducted directly from the annuity
as part of a hybrid annuity-LTC product. If you were to try to withdraw
the money from the annuity to pay for long-term care, it would still
be fully taxable. So it must be a single hybrid product, where expenses
associated with the long-term care premiums are deducted directly
from the annuity (or life insurance). This also means that, by definition,
you will be required to purchase a new policy in or after 2010 to
actually have an appropriate hybrid policy. To my knowledge, none
currently exist that actually meet the specifications of the new
law.
"Thus, everyone who wants to go down this road
in 2010 will have to replace his or her current annuity or life
insurance. Fortunately, the Pension Protection Act did provide that
an exchange from an old insurance or annuity policy to a new hybrid
policy is a nontaxable exchange under IRC Section 1035. But, a new
policy will still be required -- which also means forfeiting all
the benefits of the old policy, paying any applicable surrender
charges, and facing new underwriting requirements for life insurance
policies. It remains to be seen whether or how insurance companies
will come up with ways to make such a policy replacement easier.
"The primary issue, though, is that you don't
get to use the earnings to pay for the long-term care coverage.
Technically, you're using your cost
basis to cover the premiums, and your gains are still waiting
for you -- except in the unusual case where your cost basis has
been reduced to zero. Thus, you don't really create any tax savings,
because you're never reducing your taxable gain (except in the zero
basis case); instead, you're saving money only to the extent that
you're able to "harvest" your cost basis for the long-term care
premiums while continuing to defer the gain of the earnings. That's
still a tax benefit, but a significantly smaller one than actually
being able to use the earnings tax-free.
"An example may help. Let's assume that John
Smith has a $100,000 annuity with a $75,000 cost basis. Thus, John
has a taxable gain of $25,000. If John has $2,000 of long-term care
premiums deducted from the annuity as a hybrid product, John's cost
basis is reduced by the $2,000 payment. Thus, his annuity value
is now $98,000, his cost basis is now $73,000 (the original $75,000
less the $2,000 deduction), and thus his taxable gain is still $25,000
-- which is $98,000 minus $73,000. Thus, John hasn't done anything
to reduce the taxes he's eventually going to pay on his $25,000
plus future growth. All he's done is manage to use $2,000 of his
$75,000 cost basis without being forced to pay taxes on an annuity
withdrawal, but the taxes are still coming in full force at some
point down the road. And of course, John Smith would have had to
exchange his old annuity for a new hybrid annuity in 2010 just to
go down this road."
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