
Ben Steverman
Personal finance reporterBen Steverman is a personal finance reporter at Bloomberg.
Ben Steverman is a personal finance reporter at Bloomberg.
The president-elect's pledge to repeal President Donald Trump‘s tax cuts as soon as he is inaugurated may be stymied for the foreseeable future.
As far as the taxman is concerned, home is where the heart is.
A little-used part of the U.S. tax code allows foundations to use some of their endowments as “program-related investments.”
Nonprofits, lawmakers and others want to see more giving from fund donor-advised funds, which have grown popular recently because they’re so flexible.
Rich Americans are taking advantage of an unprecedented opportunity, made possible by the coronavirus pandemic, to transfer money to their children and grandchildren tax-free.
The super-wealthy can deploy sophisticated strategies to pass on billions of dollars to their descendants tax-free.
One way the rich get richer is through inheritance, and they’re barely paying taxes on it.
For the owner of a multimillion-dollar company, selling by the end of 2020 could result in a much smaller tax bill than striking a deal in 2021 under new rules.
The world’s second-richest person said he wants his fellow billionaires to pay much higher taxes.
Compared with the rest of the world, we don't pay that much, according to the OECD.