Gifts from Inherited IRAs
-A donor who inherits an IRA also inherits the ability to use the IRA to make qualified charitable distributions (QCDs), along with the limitations of this gift type.
To make a QCD contribution to charity, the beneficiary of the inherited IRA must be at least age 70 ½ at the time of the QCD. The age of the IRA’s original owner is not relevant, nor is the inheritor’s age at the time of the decedent’s death. The age that matters is that of the donor at the time they make the gift.
Whose Money Is It Anyway? Dealing with Unclaimed Payments for Missing Persons
-We get a lot of calls from clients regarding how to handle unclaimed payments related to life income gifts. We can help clients with the mechanical aspects in GiftWrap, of course, but the real challenges have more to do with policies and protocol. What is the right way to manage the payments that are due to people whose whereabouts are unknown? And how long is a charity – or an agent thereof – supposed to hold those funds before state laws dictate specific actions under abandoned property laws? We will go over those issues in this article.
A “License to Give” – Flexible Gift Annuities for Baby Boomers
-Approximately 10,000 American baby boomers will turn 65 today. And tomorrow. And every day after that until 2030, when all baby boomers will be over the age of 65. This “gray tsunami” is predicted to set new firsts, including in the area of longevity. According to the Society of Actuaries, for a married couple who are currently both age 65, there’s a 50% chance that one spouse will live to be 90.
While longevity is on their side, the “longevity threat,” defined as outliving your retirement income, is not. Boomers started their careers at the dawn of the earliest 401k plans, and only 6% of boomers from the tail end of this gray wave have pensions (also known as a defined benefit plan). According to the Center for Retirement at Boston College, retirees who depend on a defined contribution plan, such as a 401k or 403b, are predicted to spend down their wealth more quickly than previous generations that depended on pensions. But they point out that the more a retiree’s resources come from “an annuity-like form” – including charitable gift annuities – the slower this cohort is expected to deplete their wealth. This is where a flexible deferred gift annuity (FGA) can step in to assist both the donor AND the charity with long-term planning.
After 2023, Are We Back to Normal?
-A year ago, we published an article under the tongue-in-cheek title of “That’s Alright, It Was Only Money.” We wanted to update our understanding of historical performance results for traditional investment portfolios after the disastrous conclusion of the year 2022. We used the S&P 500 Index as the benchmark for stocks and Barclay’s Aggregate Bond Index as the benchmark for fixed income. In 2022, the former ended the year with a return of minus 13.01%, and the latter ended the year with a return of minus 19.44%. That meant our prototypical investment portfolio, invested 50% in stocks and 50% in bonds, saw a blended investment return of minus 16.23%. At the time, we pointed out that the aggregate performance for 2022 was actually worse than the aggregate performance for the Great Recession year 2008, which was “only” minus 15.88%.
And now, after another year in the books, but with quite different results in 2023, we ask the question, “Are we back to normal?” It’s probably a rhetorical question, and it begs a more specific question: “What is normal, anyway?” The S&P 500 return in 2023 was 24.23%, and the Barclays Aggregate Bond Index return was 5.53%, resulting in a blended return of 14.88%. It was a great year for investment portfolios holding traditional asset classes! The improved numbers should make everyone feel a little better off. Does it give us greater confidence to make the argument that over many years, a prudent investor strategy results in positive returns? Let’s take a look at the actual numbers.
Giving USA Report on Philanthropy: Is It the End of the World as We Know It?
-“Drop in Giving Among Steepest Ever,” screamed the Chronicle of Philanthropy headline. Other media piled on. The anodyne Associated Press led with, “Charitable Giving Drops, Only the Fourth Time in 40 Years.” And the redoubtable Barron’s reported, “Charitable Giving Falls for the First Time Since the Financial Crisis.”
Is this all just hyperbole? Or does it leave you wondering if it might be time to hang it up and consider a different career path? Don’t despair. At least not yet. The release last month of the 68th Giving USA Annual Report on Philanthropy (Giving USA Report), which reported a drop of 10.5% in giving last year, triggered the hoopla. The Report is an initiative of the Giving USA Foundation in collaboration with the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy.
It’s too bad the Report has been reduced to a headline because, well beyond a simple scoreboard of giving, it also provides a wealth of useful information and interesting insights about the history of and trends in charitable giving in the United States.
The Other Five of the Top Ten Lessons Learned from the Front Lines of Client Services - Cloned
-The world of planned giving is complex and fascinating. It is squarely at the intersection of philanthropy and estate planning, but it also overlaps with the areas of law, taxation, investments, and human behavior. There are so many nuances and specialty areas of knowledge that the gift planning professional can easily become overwhelmed and lose sight of the core issues. We at PG Calc hesitate to say, “we’ve seen it all,” but in some ways, we have!
We produce software for gift planning and gift administration, and we provide a wide array of services ranging from consulting to web services. We thought it might be helpful to pause for a moment and share what we’ve identified as the top 10 lessons (this is the first installment of 5) in planned giving that we have learned over the 37 years of our company’s existence. These are not necessarily in order of importance or relevance, and of course, they represent only a tiny portion of the knowledge required for any modern-day gift planner.
The Other Five of the Top Ten Lessons Learned from the Front Lines of Client Services
-The world of planned giving is complex and fascinating. It is squarely at the intersection of philanthropy and estate planning, but it also overlaps with the areas of law, taxation, investments, and human behavior. There are so many nuances and specialty areas of knowledge that the gift planning professional can easily become overwhelmed and lose sight of the core issues. We at PG Calc hesitate to say, “we’ve seen it all,” but in some ways, we have!
We produce software for gift planning and gift administration, and we provide a wide array of services ranging from consulting to web services. We thought it might be helpful to pause for a moment and share what we’ve identified as the top 10 lessons (this is the first installment of 5) in planned giving that we have learned over the 37 years of our company’s existence. These are not necessarily in order of importance or relevance, and of course, they represent only a tiny portion of the knowledge required for any modern-day gift planner.
Five of the Top Ten Lessons Learned from the Front Lines of Client Services
-The world of planned giving is complex and fascinating. It is squarely at the intersection of philanthropy and estate planning, but it also overlaps with the areas of law, taxation, investments, and human behavior. There are so many nuances and specialty areas of knowledge that the gift planning professional can easily become overwhelmed and lose sight of the core issues. We at PG Calc hesitate to say, “we’ve seen it all,” but in some ways, we have!
We produce software for gift planning and gift administration, and we provide a wide array of services ranging from consulting to web services. We thought it might be helpful to pause for a moment and share what we’ve identified as the top 10 lessons (this is the first installment of 5) in planned giving that we have learned over the 37 years of our company’s existence. These are not necessarily in order of importance or relevance, and of course, they represent only a tiny portion of the knowledge required for any modern-day gift planner.

