April 11, 2023— Parents with multiple children often grapple with issues around fairness and equality when structuring their estate plans. With intentional thought and communication, and sometimes a third-party facilitator, parents can strive to achieve their wishes where intentions are understood and negative impacts for a family are reduced as inheritances are discussed and executed. In this podcast, Family Legacy Advisor Jerry Inglet of Wilmington Trust Emerald Family Office & Advisory® discusses what considerations can be used by parents to contemplate these inheritance choices.
Should Parents Consider Differentiated Inheritances for Children? A Discussion of Fair Versus Equal.
Hi, thank you for tuning into today’s Emerald GEM, which stands for Get Educated in Minutes. I’m Jerry Inglet, a family legacy advisor for Wilmington Trust’s Emerald Family Office and Advisory and your host for today’s podcast. Today, I will answer a series of questions, including:
What is the difference between fair and equal regarding the inheritance you are passing to your children?
What considerations can be used by parents to contemplate these choices?
Envision a scenario where three children, all siblings, enter an emergency room together. The first child has a scraped knee, the second is experiencing stomach cramps, and the third has a fractured arm. Without explanation, the attending physician places a bandage on the knee of the first child, one on the stomach of the second, and one on the arm of the third. Although this certainly was equal, was it fair? And should the doctor have explained the decision for the treatment?
Parents with multiple children often grapple with issues around fairness and equality when structuring their estate plans. Sometimes an equal distribution is not always fair. While an equal division is more easily computed—for example, each child receives one-third everything—a fair distribution may be slightly more complex and unique and layered with context. Within a lens of fairness and equality, emotions can run high and pull apart the most amicable of families. Instances where a matriarch or patriarch would consider fair over equal may include circumstances where:
Other reasons for differentiated inheritances can be rooted in family discord:
Some unbalanced bequests account for the varied financial success of children when parents favor a lesser financially positioned child. With these possibilities in play, a well-thought estate plan (accompanied by an equally intended communication plan to the benefactors) can help keep a family connected while fulfilling the parent’s wishes on the passing of their resources.
Here are some questions rooted in strategy and behavioral finance that parents could consider (in concert with their tax and financial advisors) that may help ease the pain and define the division of resources:
With all of these concepts under consideration, are you worried about where to begin with this process as a parent?
Fair and equal can be particularly pronounced when it comes to family heirlooms. These items can have significant economic value, but frequently they have outsized emotional or sentimental importance to one or more family members. Therefore, this can be a good entry point for a fair and equal discussion. Whether your estate plan is prepared, under contemplation, or close to completion, you might consider constructing a family heirloom policy where you:
Once completed, ask your children:
Depending on the conversation’s outcome, the children’s expressed maturity, and temperament of the moment, a parent could use this platform to gauge resistance and conflict within the family on measures of equal versus fair. This exercise could be the catalyst for parents to provide details centered on their reasoning behind the structure and distribution of their estate plan.
Equal versus fair may not be easy for parents, but with intentional thought and communication, and sometimes a third-party facilitator, parental wishes can be achieved where intentions are understood and negative impacts for a family are reduced as inheritances are discussed and executed.
Thanks again for joining us today. Please contact your Wilmington Trust advisor if you have any questions about fair versus equitable treatment of inheritance for your family; we would be glad to help you. See you next time!
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