The
Kenai Peninsula Online (Alaska)
As
Boomer Parents' Inheritances Dwindle, Family Disputes
Grow
By
Hope Yen
AP Business Writer
NEW
YORK (AP) -- As an estate planning attorney, Les
Kotzer said he was taught to focus on helping clients
save money. That view changed, he said, after a
visit one day from a baby boomer couple.
The
husband and wife, both in their 50s, were smartly
dressed, but later revealed their luxury car was
leased and their home ''mortgaged to the hilt.''
When Kotzer asked what the husband did for a living,
they explained he was a ''waiter.''
''The
wife said, 'He's waiting for the inheritance,'''
said Kotzer. ''A lot of boomers are depending on
what their parents have saved all these years to
pay off their debts and loans.
''Within
that dynamic, you see problems,'' he said.
Kotzer,
co-author of ''The Family Fight: Planning to Avoid
It,'' said the couple are typical of many boomers
who expect to inherit money from their parents.
They might be disappointed, he said, because the
family assets have dwindled, or their parents haven't
given them any information about their finances
or about their wills.
And
many times, boomers find they're fighting with siblings
and other family members over who gets how much.
A
whole industry of financial planning and attorney
services has cropped up aimed specifically at avoiding
such problems after a parent's death, ranging from
extensive will planning to counseling on how seniors
can best communicate inheritance decisions to their
children.
The
problems can start, some planners say, because boomers
have a different attitude toward money than their
parents.
''Where
the older people were savers, because they were
Depression-era children and adults, baby boomers
had more. We tend to be more the credit card generation,''
said Debra Kroll, director of Temple Law School's
Elderly Law Project in Philadelphia. ''So baby boomers
often depend on their parents' assets.''
And
many seniors actually have fewer assets to pass
on. The bear market has ravaged many stock portfolios,
while their other savings have been depleted by
the high costs of nursing homes, long-term care
and prescription drugs.
Problems
also arise because of changes in the family structure.
The increase in divorce and remarriage over the
past two decades has created confusion as to the
rights of stepchildren and second spouses in wills,
experts say.
''This
is a very financially lucrative area for attorneys.
It didn't used to be,'' Kroll said. ''Children are
encouraging parents to do estate planning to wind
up with the money. ... This field is expanding based
on that.''
The
result: lawyers and financial planners are starting
to focus less on documenting exactly what a senior
wants to say in a will, and are spending more time
asking detailed questions about their boomer children,
such as financial status, living situation and relationship
with siblings.
Kotzer
says he now counsels clients specifically with the
goal of avoiding family disputes, even if the method
of distributing assets results in higher tax costs.
For
example, he notes that many parents wish to reward
children who care for them in old age. He suggests
parents give gifts to the child while still alive,
even it means paying a hefty gift tax, and then
allot equal shares in the will to avoid sibling
disputes after death.
''Some
of the times when people do planning to save taxes,
they don't realize they could be hurting their family,''
Kotzer said. ''My practice is geared toward saving
the family.''
Some
financial planners also act as family counselors,
encouraging parents to include children early on
in estate planning meetings, so they understand
exactly who is getting what and why.
Or,
if that proves too uncomfortable for a senior, financial
advisers suggest filming a videotape that can shown
after a will is read to help explain the parents'
decisions.
''I
think the advisers can work with the family as a
whole and that takes a different skill -- a counseling
background or talent in bringing together people,''
said Sharon Burns, executive director of the Association
for Financial Counseling and Planning Education,
based in Upper Arlington, Ohio.
''Financial
advisers need to thoroughly delve into the family
issues, such as what are the relationships and whether
there are children who have special needs,'' she
said.