Why some Black Americans might miss out on the $68 trillion transfer of generational wealth
When actor Chadwick Boseman died, he didn’t have a will. Neither did recording artists Prince and Aretha Franklin.
Each time the news broke, there was surprise that such notable names hadn’t made estate plans. Yet, estate planning isn’t as common as experts argue it should be, including among Black Americans.
Overall, 33 percent of U.S. adults have a will, according to Caring.com’s 2021 wills and estate planning survey. Meanwhile, 27.5 percent of Black Americans have one, up from 25.9 percent in 2020.
Despite the growth, Black Americans could miss out on the largest wealth transfer in history, said Brickson Diamond, co-founder of Black House Foundation, a nonprofit aimed at creating new opportunities for the Black community in the film world.
Over the next 25 years, an estimated $68 trillion will be transferred from U.S. households to heirs and charity, according to an analysis of high net worth and ultra-high net worth markets by consulting group Cerulli Associates.
Without a plan in place, probate costs could be 3 percent to 8 percent of the value of an estate, said Diamond, a board member of Gentreo, an online estate-planning platform.
There is also a lack of clarity around a loved one’s wishes and potential discord that may cause among family members. Then, there is property that may have been in the family for a generation or more.
“So many families lose their family access and ownership of land,” he said.
“So if you haven’t prepared to pay the taxes and get the mortgage covered … the home will at best fall into disrepair and at worst fall out of the hands of the family.”
To be sure, Black Americans’ median wealth is less than 15 percent of that of white families in the U.S., according to the Federal Reserve’s 2019 Survey of Consumer Finances. White families had a median wealth of $188,200, compared to $24,100 for Black families.
The median Black household wealth was forecast to hit zero by 2053 in a 2017 report by Prosperity Now and Institute for Policy Studies. Then, the pandemic hit, disproportionately affecting Black communities and accelerating that timeline, said Portia Wood, a Los Angeles-based estate attorney who focuses on Black, Latino and LGBTQ families.
“We are in a state of emergency now,” she said. “It is not a 2053 number anymore; it is here.”
Everyone over the age of 18 should make a plan, Wood said.
“The misconception that age is a factor, that you’re supposed to be old to do estate planning, or you’re supposed to be wealthy to do estate planning is just wrong,” she said.
She suggests finding a culturally competent attorney to help you, one that understands the specific issues Black Americans face.
There are also online resources, which may be able to help with basic situations.
What you’ll need outside of a will
Here’s a sampling of some documents you’ll need apart from a last will and testament:
Durable power of attorney: This document lays out who can make financial decisions for you in the event you are incapacitated.
Health-care power of attorney: This designates someone to handle your medical decisions if you become sick and can’t make them for yourself.
Living will: Also called an advanced directive, a living will is a document that expresses your wishes for medical treatments you would or would not want to use to keep you alive, like resuscitation and intubation.
Distribution of assets
A last will and testament spells out who you want to give your assets to after you die. It also allows you to name a guardian for any minor children you may have.
What’s more, people should consider revisiting the plan as life circumstances change. Just don’t think of it as one and done, Diamond said.
“It’s continuous,” he said. ”[It] evolves as your assets evolve, evolves as your family evolves.”
Then there are trusts, which hold assets on behalf of your beneficiaries instead of those assets going directly to them. Diamond recommends trusts for those with higher asset levels and/or a complicated financial situation.
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Wood believes trusts are a better method than wills to build generational wealth, because of the way they protect your assets.
“For most people, a will is not enough,” she said. “Your trust creates a trust for the people you left behind, the beneficiaries, with instructions.”
No matter the route you chose, it’s important to take a step toward creating a plan, which can help create generational wealth, she said.
“You can’t afford not to,” Wood said. “The economic cost is just too great to do nothing.”
An earlier version of this article was first published on CNBC.
Disclosure: Invest in You: Ready. Set. Grow. is a financial wellness and education initiative from CNBC and Acorns, the micro-investing app. NBCUniversal and Comcast Ventures are investors in Acorns.
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