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October, 2006 Technical Newsletter
Provided by Leimberg Information Services
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other issues.
Code Section 7702B Long-term
Care Gets New Life - But Will It Be Healthy?
Michael E. Kitces
is Director of Financial Planning of the
Pinnacle Advisory Group in Columbia, MD and the co-author, with
John L. Olsen of the
Olsen Financial Group of
THE ANNUITY ADVISOR (800 543 0874) , the most comprehensive,
practical, and well-balanced book I've seen yet on annuities!
The Pension Protection Act of 2006, signed into on
August 17th, 2006 and effective 2010, allows
life insurance and annuity companies to offer long-term-care riders on top of
regular policies. It also provides that internal charges against the values in
annuities and permanent life insurance policies used to pay long-term-care
insurance premiums aren't taxed.
Here, Michael fills LISI members in on the details
of this legislation involving life insurance, long term care insurance riders,
and Section 1035 exchanges. It's yet another surprise in PPA-2006
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
Section 844 of the Pension Protection Act of 2006
was intended to expand accessibility to tax-favored long-term care insurance by
providing the ability for life insurance and annuity contracts to add long-term
care insurance riders and use the cash value to cover the cost of long-term care
insurance premiums without incurring taxable distributions, effective after
2009. The new law broadens the provisions for Code Section 1035 tax-free
exchanges to allow for exchange of life and annuity policies into long-term care
insurance contracts.
However, the ordering rules applicable to long-term
care insurance premium charges substantially diminish the tax benefits of the
new law as a method of acquiring long-term insurance coverage.
FACTS:
Tax Favored LTC
Riders Allowed on Life and Annuity Contracts.
Section 844 of the Pension Protection Act of 2006
(PPA 2006), effective after 2009, will allow for life insurance and annuity
contracts to carry a long-term care insurance rider on a tax-favored basis.
Under the new Code Section 7702B(e)(1), such riders will be treated for tax
purposes as a separate contract. This allows the general Code Section 7702B(b)
tax-favored treatment of qualified long-term care insurance policies to apply -
even though the coverage is actually in the form of a rider on another and
different type of policy.
Premium Charges
Not Taxable:
Under the new Code Section 72(e)(11), the premium charges associated with the
long-term care insurance that are channeled and distributed from the cash value
of a life insurance or annuity contract will not be treated as taxable
distributions from the insurance or annuity contract (IRC Section 72(e)(11)(B)).
However, distributions excluded from income
that are used to cover the cost of long-term care insurance will reduce the
owner's investment in the contract (but not below zero) when determining gain
on future taxable distributions (IRC Section 72(e)(11)(A)).
Insurers Must
File Information Returns:
Under the new Code Section 6050U(a), insurance companies will be required to
file information reporting returns with the IRS disclosing:
-
the amount of aggregate charges made against each
contract for the calendar year,
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the amount of the reduction of the investment in
the contract because of these charges, and
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the name, address, and TIN of the individual who
is the holder of each contract.
Deduction Denied:
Under the new Code Section 7702B(e)(2), any payments for long-term care
insurance deducted under a life insurance or annuity contract will be denied an
IRC Section 213(a) medical expense deduction for premiums paid.
LTC Riders Not
Allowed in Qualified Plans:
Under the new IRC Section 7702B(e)(4), the riders will not be available for
qualified annuities purchased under an IRC Section 401(a) employer retirement
trust (e.g., 401(k) plan), a 403(a) or 403(b) annuity plan, or an IRA.
Section 1035
Exchanges Expanded:
IRC Section 1035, providing for tax-free exchanges of insurance and annuity
contracts, is expanded to allow a life insurance, endowment, or annuity contract
to be exchanged for a qualified long-term care insurance policy.
The new IRC Section 1035(a)(4) also allows a
qualified long-term care insurance policy to be exchanged for another long-term
care policy.
In addition, under the new IRC Sections 1035(b)(2)
and (3), an exchange to or from a life insurance or annuity contract that has a
long-term care insurance rider to a policy that does not have such a rider will
still be treated as like-kind property for exchange purposes.
COMMENT:
The new rules of PPA 2006, Section 844, represent a
substantial expansion of accessibility for long-term care insurance by providing
for new opportunities to pay for long-term care insurance. However, the
mechanism that Congress chose to implement the non-taxable use of insurance and
annuity cash values substantially diminishes the value of the new provisions.
Nonetheless, the new provisions applicable to 1035 exchanges may still provide
substantial new opportunities for purchasing long-term care insurance on a
tax-favored basis.
To understand why certain aspects of the new law are not very favorable, though,
it is first necessary to fully understand the application of the new rules and
what has changed.
Old Rules versus New Rules
Although long-term care insurance riders have
existed on life insurance and annuity riders for several years, the tax
treatment has generally been significantly less favorable. Life insurance
policies have generally provided for coverage by imputing income to the contract
holder for long-term care insurance premiums that were deducted from the
insurance cash value; annuity contracts, on the other hand, have tended to
simply credit any long-term care insurance benefits directly to the annuity cash
value, forcing the beneficiary to still take an annuity withdrawal (with the
associated ordinary income, gains-first treatment accorded under IRC Section
72(e)(2)(B)) and pay taxes accordingly.
The new rules of PPA 2006 seem to allow for the best
of both worlds: tax-free use of cash value to coverage long-term care insurance
premiums under the new IRC Section 72(e)(11), and tax-free benefits under the
new IRC Section 7702B(e)(1).
BEWARE:
Only "QUALIFIED" LTC POLICIES ELIGIBLE.
Only long-term care policies that are "qualified"
under IRC Section 7702B(b), as created under the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996, are eligible for the new rider and 1035
exchange treatment.
The primary difference between qualified and
non-qualified long-term care insurance contracts is that the triggers to provide
benefits are generally broader under non-qualified contracts, and are not
restricted to the Congressionally defined benefit triggers established under IRC
Section 7702B(c): that the individual receive care pursuant to a plan of care
prescribed by a licensed health care practitioner, and that the individual be
certified by a licensed health care practitioner as being "chronically ill" by
either being unable to perform at least 2 activities of daily living or
requiring substantial supervision due to severe cognitive impairment.
Although most long-term care insurance policies sold
today are qualified contracts, some insurers still provide non-qualified
contracts.
However, for purposes of the new provisions, all
riders to life insurance or annuity contracts must be qualified to receive
preferential tax treatment, and 1035 exchanges will only be allowed into
qualified long-term care policies.
Limited Benefit for PURCHASING Contracts with Riders
The problem with the new provisions allowing
long-term care insurance riders on life insurance and annuity contracts lies in
the effect of the new IRC Section 72(e)(11)(A), which states that when charges
are deducted from the cash value to cover long-term care insurance premiums, the
investment in the contract shall be reduced (but not below zero).
In the world of life insurance and annuities,
"investment in the contract" is the tax-equivalent of cost basis. Thus, a
withdrawal from the cash value that reduces investment in the contract is
essentially the equivalent of withdrawing your cost basis without being forced
to withdraw your gains (on which taxes would be due). This cost-basis first
treatment can be helpful, but it is not nearly as effective as being allowed to
actually use the gains in the
contract on a tax-free basis.
For example, imagine an individual who holds a
tax-deferred annuity with $100,000 of cash value, and $60,000 of cost basis –
the contract has a $40,000 tax-deferred gain. The annuity has a new rider that
provides long-term care insurance, and the policy deducts $2,000 from the cash
value of the annuity to pay for the coverage. The $2,000 premium charge reduces
the cash value to $98,000, but under the ordering rules of 72(e)(11)(A), the
investment in the contract is also reduced by $2,000, to $38,000.
Thus, in the end, the individual still
has a $60,000 gain (the excess of $98,000 over $38,000) – the only benefit of
the rider was the ability to spend the $2,000 long-term care insurance premium
out of the annuity's cost basis while allowing the $60,000 gain to remain
deferred (since a withdrawal from the annuity, if purchased after August 13th,
1982, would be treated as a gains-first LIFO distribution under IRC Section
72(e)(2)(B)).
Unfortunately, though, the story does not end there.
Not only does the charge for long-term care insurance premiums against the cash
value of the contract spend down existing cost basis that would have always been
tax-free – the new 7702B(e)(2) rules also
state that the charges against the contract will not allow a medical expense
deduction for long-term care insurance premiums under IRC Section 213(a). Thus,
the ordering rules essentially require
that the withdrawal be allocated against after-tax dollars that constituted cost
basis, but simultaneously disallow a tax deduction for the long-term care
insurance premiums spent with those after-tax dollars!
By contrast, if the individual acquiring long-term
care insurance were to use any dollars
except those under the insurance or annuity contract as a rider, the
individual may at least be eligible for a partial or full deduction for the
long-term care insurance premiums, subject to the applicable rules under IRC
Section 213(d)(10). In the end, using the new long-term care insurance riders
may be the best way to ensure paying long-term care insurance premiums
only with after-tax dollars,
without ever getting a tax
deduction, while only continuing to defer a tax gain in the contract that will
still be due whenever the contract is surrendered (unless it is a life insurance
policy that matures as a tax-free death benefit under IRC Section 101) – that's
not exactly an encouraging reason to ever acquire such a contract!
Thus, in Congress's effort to thwart taxpayers from
a "double dip" by receiving a tax-free expenditure from an insurance or annuity
policy and a tax deduction for the payment at the same time, an individual will
usually end out with the worst of
both worlds – still retaining all of their pre-tax gains, reducing the cost
basis that they could have recovered tax-free, and receiving no tax deduction
either!
OPPORTUNITIES FOR RIDERS IN LIMITED CIRCUMSTANCES
Given the issues discussed above, it will be rare
that an individual would actually be well-served for tax purposes to purchase a
long-term care insurance rider on a life insurance or annuity contract. At best,
the expenditure will be a breakeven event – if the long-term care insurance
premium were otherwise not going to be deductible anyway, due to the applicable
limitations for medical expense deductions, then using the cash value (or
rather, the cost basis thereof) of an insurance or annuity policy will leave the
individual no better off, but no worse off either.
However, if the contract's cost basis is actually
already very close to $0, a long-term care insurance rider may be more useful.
This is because, under 72(e)(11)(A), long-term care insurance charges will
reduce the investment in the contract, but
not below zero. Thus, if the contract has a cost basis so low that
the long-term care insurance charges actually would reduce the investment
contract to and below zero, then additional long-term care insurance charges
will reduce the current value of the contract, without reducing the cost basis
(because it's already limited to zero), and will thereby reduce the gain in the
contract – yet still not cause a taxable distribution under 72(e)(11)(B). In
this case, individuals really will be able to spend down dollars that represent
future taxable gains on a tax-free basis for their long-term care insurance
coverage.
In addition, it's notable that for some individuals,
harvesting the cost basis of their annuity or life insurance policies may still
be more advantageous than tapping other sources to cover the cost of coverage.
If the individual's only other available sources for cash are illiquid
investments, and/or vehicles with even less favorable tax consequences (e.g.,
pre-tax retirement accounts), it may still be advantageous to acquire coverage
with a long-term care insurance rider on an insurance or annuity policy. In such
a case, the ability to tap the contract's cost basis without incurring an income
tax event by withdrawing the gains may still be a tax-favored strategy,
particularly if the existing policy has large gains, relative to the
alternatives available for the individual.
In the case of an insurance contract, the individual may be able to tap the cost
basis of the insurance, and then hold the contract itself until it matures as a
tax-free death benefit, essentially allowing the individual to spend the cost
basis and still receive the gains tax-free (although this may still be less
favorable than paying with after-tax dollars outside of the contract and
receiving a tax deduction for long-term care insurance premiums paid).
It remains to be seen whether insurance companies
may offer new long-term care insurance riders that may be added to existing
policies, or whether (in all likelihood) individuals will be required to
complete a 1035 exchange into a new policy to acquire one with a long-term care
insurance rider.
Due Diligence for 1035 Exchanges
Given the delayed effect for the provision of PPA
2006, Section 884, insurance companies will have ample time to establish new
insurance and annuity products with long-term care riders. This will provide a
strong temptation for many individuals to 1035 exchange on a tax-free basis
their existing life insurance or annuity policies to new policies that carry
such riders to take advantage of the new rules.
However, beyond the caveats discussed above about
the limited tax advantages of this strategy, in evaluating a 1035 exchange due
diligence should still be performed on the existing contract as well. The life
insurance or annuity policy may provide death benefits, pricing, or other
guarantees, in the original contract that are unavailable in the new contract,
which may make the overall result less valuable.
It remains to be seen whether or to what extent
insurance companies may allow existing insurance or annuity policies to add
long-term care insurance riders. Such an opportunity would allow the individual
to preserve the existing benefits of the insurance or annuity policy; however,
new medical underwriting for the long-term care coverage will likely be
required.
New Single-Pay LTC policies
Due to the expansion of the IRC Section 1035(a)
rules to allow an exchange of life insurance, endowment, and annuity policies to
purchase qualified long-term care insurance, there will likely be new product
innovation over the next several years to accommodate the demand for new
policies funded with single lump sum payments from existing insurance and
annuity contracts. The market for such policies has not been strong in recent
years, but the opportunity to use existing policies with substantial cash values
will likely reinvigorate this market.
As new products come available, prospective buyers
will need to be particularly cautious to understand the provisions of any
non-forfeiture benefits applicable to such long-term care policies in the event
of untimely death or policy lapse – otherwise, an individual may unwittingly
deposit a substantial sum from an existing insurance or annuity contract to a
new long-term care contract, and then forfeit some or all of the value with a
lapse or death.
Although most single premium long-term care
insurance policies provide for some non-forfeiture benefits in the event of
untimely death or lapse, additional scrutiny in this area will be warranted when
policy exchanges begin after 2009.
Nonetheless, this area represents one of the most
favorable tax-planning opportunities under the new Section 884, since these 1035
exchange provisions genuinely provide an opportunity for an individual to
utilize the embedded gains in their life insurance or annuity contracts for
long-term care insurance, without recognizing the embedded gain.
However, these rules may also necessitate future
guidance from the Treasury on the tax consequences of receiving a long-term care
insurance non-forfeiture value. In the past, such receipts could never
constitute a taxable gain, because the non-forfeiture values would always be
less than the aggregate premiums paid.
Under the new rules, though, an individual could exchange a contract with a high
cash value and extremely low cost basis into a new long-term care policy, and
then surrender the policy to receive the non-forfeiture value, effectively
harvesting the cash value from the original policy through the non-forfeiture
provisions without paying taxes on the gain. This area will likely be clarified
in future Regulations.
EFFECTIVE DATE:
The new
rules are generally effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2009. The Act also restricts the application of the new rules to contracts
issued after December 31, 1996. This restriction assures that the contracts that
were grandfathered under HIPAA are not affected by the Act.
PLANNING:
Overall, the new provisions of PPA 2006, Section
884, should provide a strong boon to the use of long-term care coverage, but the
implementation that Congress used will make the provisions allowing 1035
exchanges into single-premium long-term care insurance policies far more
advantageous than adding long-term care insurance riders to existing insurance
or annuity policies (or 1035 exchanging into insurance or annuity policies with
such riders).
With the anticipated extension of long-term care
state partnership programs under the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, signed
earlier this year, Congress is clearly seeking to make long-term care insurance
coverage an increasingly appealing as a mechanism to fund future long-term
health care needs, and as an alternative to spending substantial personal
accumulated assets or seeking eligibility for Medicaid.
However, it remains to be seen whether the public will take advantage of the new
rules of PPA 2006, Section 884, given the limited tax benefits actually
available with respect to long-term care insurance riders!
HOPE THIS HELPS
YOU HELP OTHERS MAKE A POSITIVE DIFFERENCE!
Michael Kitces
Edited by Steve Leimberg
CITE AS:
Steve Leimberg's Employee Benefits and Retirement
Planning Newsletter # 386 (September 26, 2006) at
http://www.leimbergservices.com Copyright 2006 Leimberg
Information Services, Inc. (LISI).
Reproduction in Any Form or Forwarding to Any Person
Prohibited - Without Express Permission.
CITES:
Section 884 of the Pension Protection Act of 2006;
IRC Sections 7702B(b), 7702B(c), 7702(b)(e)(1), 7702B(e)(2), 7702B(e)(4),
72(e)(3), 72(e)(11), 6050U(a), 1035(a), 1035(a)(4), 1035(b)(2), 1035(b)(3),
213(a), 213(d)(10). See also Janet Kidd Steward, "Insurance Changes for
Long-Term Care", Chicago Tribune, Sept. 24, 2006.
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