May 2000 No. 00-1
OCPA Policy Paper A Report from the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs
Oklahoma’s Death Tax: Not O.K. by Edward J. McCaffery Maurice Jones Jr. Professor of Law, University of Southern California Law School and Professor of Law and Economics, California Institute of Technology
Executive Summary The United States are almost united on one point — states should not go over and above the federal death tax and impose additional burdens on some of their most economically productive citizens. As more and more states drop the unwise and unfair policy of having their own provincial death taxes, the argument against these levies becomes more and more compelling. Oklahoma now stands almost alone in having a state-level estate tax. It raises little revenue in gross, and could well lose money on net. It is complicated, inefficient, and unfair. From almost any point of view, the message is clear: Oklahoma should get with the times and drop its death tax.
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