Five Towns Jewish Home - 1-20-22

Page 110

110 14

JANUARY 20, 2022 | The Jewish Home OCTOBER 29, 2015 | The Jewish Home

Your

Money

Virtue is Its Own Reward By Allan Rolnick, CPA

I

n 1996, two ambitious doctors named Raymond and Mortimer Sackler rolled out an extended-release painkiller called OxyContin. The drug was a hit, delivering a warm glow of relief for millions of Americans. And their company, Purdue Pharmaceutical, made the Sacklers billionaires. The family used part of that fortune to make millions in tax-deductible gifts to dozens of elite educational and cultural institutions across the world: Harvard and Yale, the Met and the Guggenheim, the Globe Theater, and the Louvre. Today, of course, the Sackler name is ruined, and the gifts are dismissed as reputation laundering. It turns out when the company pinkie-swore OxyContin wasn’t addictive, they were — what’s the word I’m looking for here? — lying. OxyContin inflamed an opioid crisis that has cost 500,000 lives so far. You’d be a billionaire, too, if you sold something as habit-forming as Marlboros, convinced thousands of doctors to prescribe it, and then got insurance companies to pay for it. You might even sleep at night while doing it — if you had no soul. Today, most of those places with “Sackler” plaques on their walls are

scrambling to take them down. And it shouldn’t surprise you that there’s a tax angle lurking underneath the whole debate. Last month, the author Malcolm Gladwell wrote a column outlining a modest proposal for donors who take fat tax deductions to plaster their name all over schools and museums.

If your goal is bragging rights, by all means, chisel your name on the wall and enjoy knowing generations of students will walk by wondering who you are. But give up the tax break. Or, if the deduction really is the goal, give up the naming rights so a more egotistical donor can chisel their name on the wall.

It turns out when the company pinkie-swore OxyContin wasn’t addictive, they were — what’s the word I’m looking for here? — lying.

He notes that philanthropy offers two distinct benefits: an earthly benefit to be honored by others and a heavenly benefit to please G-d. But then he points out that those two benefits are mutually contradictory. If you seek the earthly benefit, G-d frowns on you. You can’t have both! Gladwell’s solution? Make donors choose one benefit or the other.

If Gladwell’s double-dipping rule became law, it wouldn’t be the first time the tax code has asked donors to make that sort of choice. Under current law, if your gift entitles you to any sort of tangible benefit, the portion of your gift that covers the benefit is nondeductible. If you pay $50 for a ticket to a banquet with a $20 meal, for example, your deduction is

just $30. There’s even a special rule for donations tied to college sports season tickets. Up until 2018, you could deduct 80% of those gifts — but now you can’t deduct anything at all. These issues raise broader questions about the role of tax breaks for charitable giving, especially to bigger institutions that already have plenty of money. Harvard’s endowment has grown to $53.2 billion. That’s more than the entire gross domestic product of 122 countries. Do taxpayers really need to subsidize gifts to a university that’s richer than Bolivia? You may not have as much to give as the Sacklers. (Boo.) But you aren’t giving to ease a guilty conscience. (Yay!) And charitable gifts are some of the most powerful tools in the tax planner’s little black bag. So call us before you give, and let us help you do well for yourself while you secure your legacy!

Allan J Rolnick is a CPA who has been in practice for over 30 years in Queens, NY. He welcomes your comments and can be reached at 718-896-8715 or at allanjrcpa@aol.com.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Pack Up Your Troubles by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

3min
pages 111-112

Your Money

3min
page 110

Bagpipes, a Limp, and a Ghost by Avi Heiligman

12min
pages 102-105

A Flailing Biden Sold His “Whole Soul” in Political Desperation by Marc A. Thiessen

4min
page 101

As the U.S. and Russia Debate Ukraine, It’s Hard to See the Wiggle Room by David Ignatius

4min
page 99

Biden is Failing Politically by David Ignatius

4min
page 100

Notable Quotes

6min
pages 96-98

JWOW

4min
page 94

Arm Yourself with Immune-Boosting Foods by Cindy Weinberger, MS RD CDN

3min
page 88

The Aussie Gourmet: Vietnamese Rolls

2min
page 95

Avoidance by Dr. Deb Hirschhorn

8min
pages 86-87

Teen Talk

5min
pages 80-81

Delving into the Daf by Rabbi Avrohom Sebrow

4min
pages 70-71

World Builders

2min
pages 74-75

Learning to Fly by Rav Moshe Weinberger

7min
pages 64-65

National

9min
pages 26-31

There’s No Compromising on the Kedusha of the Kotel: Why You Need to Sign the “One Kotel” Petition Now

12min
pages 76-79

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

3min
pages 62-63

The Journey to Your Ultimate Self by Rabbi Shmuel Reichman

7min
pages 66-69
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.