| Incentive Trusts--Keeping a Steady Hand on the TillerA good legacy may work wonders for those left behind, but you  may feel that your heirs need more than just financial benefit from  your estate. If you would like to provide direction to your heirs  and help ensure that they pursue important life goals, you may  consider including incentive trusts in your estate plans. How far can you go in using your estate to provide rewards for  actions and behaviors you would like to see carried out by your  heirs? You will probably find yourself limited more by your  imagination and ability to foresee circumstances than by legal  constraints. Where You Can Focus Your LegacyFollowing are some themes commonly contained in incentive  trusts.   Education: Incentive trusts have been used to  provide extra support to heirs who pursue advanced degrees, focus  on designated fields of study or attend specified institutions.  Some trusts are designed to reward outstanding scholarship and  academic achievement. Some permit withholding support from those  who fail to meet minimum levels of accomplishment.Moral and family values: Some trusts are  intended to promote family life by providing income support to  heirs who choose to stay at home with children. Some offer bonuses  for childbearing, foster care or adoption. Some withhold benefits  from those heirs who might be convicted of a crime or fail a  prescribed drug or alcohol screening test.Business and vocational choices: Entrepreneurs  can use trusts to provide incentives to heirs who help carry on a  family business. Trusts can be designed to encourage or discourage  career choices specified by the trust creator. Trusts can also be  used to offer focused financial support to beneficiaries who opt to  follow paths that are personally and socially rewarding, yet  generally less lucrative.Charitable and religious opportunities: Some  trusts are designed to encourage religious behavior by requiring  specific observances. Some trusts provide funds for dues or other  costs associated with religious participation. Some subsidize heirs  who choose missionary work or other religious vocations. Some  provide matching funds for heirs' contributions to favored  organizations. Structuring an Incentive TrustIncentive trusts can provide many of the same benefits as other  types of trusts. For example, by placing assets in a properly  designed trust, you can move them out of your estate in order to  manage tax liabilities more efficiently. You can also ensure that  assets will be managed professionally and held securely through a  stable financial institution.
 In addition, there are a number of considerations for trust design  that may be especially significant for incentive trusts:
   Goal setting: The goals you wish to achieve  with your incentives can be judged only by the terms you specify in  your trust documents. Therefore, the most effective incentive  trusts spell out concrete goals and offer objective, verifiable  criteria for assessing their achievement. For example, if you  provide incentives for educational achievement, you will want to  indicate a threshold grade-point average rather than just saying  "good grades." You will also want to spell out the precise reward  for achieving each goal.Trustee selection: Interpretation and  enforcement of your trust terms typically will fall in the hands of  your designated trustee. Well-designed trusts not only name a  trustee, but also list alternates and/or include provisions for  naming a new trustee if the primary trustee becomes unavailable or  incapacitated. Since a trustee's decisions should be completely  objective, be sure to designate a person that has no stake in the  outcome of any trust provision. Also, be sure that the trustee is  not a potential beneficiary of the trust.Treatment of beneficiaries: Many trust  creators try to be sure that all potential beneficiaries have equal  opportunities to earn rewards from the trust. For instance, a  beneficiary who excels at a vocation such as teaching, music or the  arts should be rewarded just as someone who becomes a physician or  an executive or chooses some other generally more lucrative career.  Likewise, it is common that incentive trusts also have special  provisions to provide assistance for beneficiaries with special  needs.Flexibility: Unforeseen events may interfere  with carrying out the intentions of the trust in the future. Your  beneficiaries may face illness, catastrophe or economic hardships  that interfere with their ability to comply with trust terms.  Therefore, you may want to lay out conditions under which your  trustee can deviate from your blueprint in order to adapt when  necessary. Limitations to Keep in MindIncentive trusts may be subject to what is called the rule of  perpetuities, a legal concept that says trusts must be liquidated  at some point after their creation. This rule is enforced in many,  but not all, states. It applies to trusts that are created in the  state where the rule is enforced (you may generally create a trust  in any state, not just the state in which you reside). As a  consequence, you will want to be sure that any trust you do create  can last for as long as needed to achieve your goals.
 Certain types of incentive trusts may also be subject to the  generation skipping transfer (GST) tax. Where an incentive trust  fits the complex definition of a GST, the rules limit the aggregate  amounts that can be placed in the trust without incurring a tax of  about half of the value in the trust. In some instances, life  insurance can augment the amounts permitted under GST rules.
 
 An incentive trust can be a powerful tool to help you provide  continuing guidance and direction to your heirs. Yet creating such  a trust involves complex legal, tax and investment management  choices. For this reason, be sure to seek advice from trusted legal  and financial professionals.
   This article was prepared by S&P Capital IQ  Financial Communications and is not intended to provide specific  investment advice or recommendations for any individual. Consult  your financial advisor, or me, if you have any  questions. Because of the possibility of human or mechanical error by  S&P Capital IQ Financial Communications or its sources, neither  S&P Capital IQ Financial Communications nor its sources  guarantees the accuracy, adequacy, completeness or availability of  any information and is not responsible for any errors or omissions  or for the results obtained from the use of such information. In no  event shall S&P Capital IQ Financial Communications be liable  for any indirect, special or consequential damages in connection  with subscribers' or others' use of the content. Tracking #1-078498 |