Trust Estate
We Need To Talk About Inheritance - But Too Many Don't

Authors of a recent report discuss what deters families from discussing wealth with their offspring and what can and should be done to help the process.
A large number of high net worth Americans are still not talking
to their children – including grown adults – about the wealth
they are likely to inherit out of a misplaced, if understandable,
desire not to confuse or frighten inheritors about the amounts
involved.
A few weeks ago,
The Merrill Center for Family Wealth produced a white paper
showing that an alarming six in 10 wealthy families have no
process or structure in place to ensure that they communicate
family wealth decisions effectively. At a time when trillions of
dollars are due to be transferred to younger adults, the stakes
for getting such transfers wrong are huge.
“We haven’t had a level of data that is that detailed before,”
Matthew Wesley, co-author of the paper and director at the
Merrill Center for Family Wealth, told this publication in a
recent call about the report.
“Families aren’t great at communicating about wealth inheritance
for three reasons: it is complex and they don’t know where to
start, they are concerned about the impact and, in a few cases,
they want to control the information,” Wesley said.
Merrill advises HNW families to gradually increase the amount of
information they give to their children, working from a broad
discussion about core values and the purposes of wealth, then
talking more about structures, such as trusts, before full
transparency about the amounts involved. The firm’s report likens
the process to turning up the dimmer switch rather than simply
turning on the light.
The white paper delves into detail about how the stages of
educating children should be approached; it also sketches out the
different approaches families have in deciding what and how much
money to transfer to children. The paper found that 69 per cent
of families give children equal amounts; 11 per cent base it on
merit; 8 per cent base it on need and 12 per cent will select
some other test.
The report also breaks down families’ philosophies about decision
making in great detail: 35 per cent of them are “autocratic”; 21
per cent are “technocratic”; 17 per cent “democratic”; 17 per
cent “meritocratic” and 10 per cent are “representative”. These
terms are defined as follows: autocratic is where one person
makes the main decisions and others give few or no contributions;
technocratic families draw input depending on the special
knowledge and training of family members; democratic families
adopt collective decision-making; meritocratic families enable
decisions to be made by those with a proven track record of
making good decisions, and representative families will select
certain members to act on behalf of all members on their
behalf.
A focus on wealth structures (trusts, foundations, etc) is
particularly important, Wesley said. “People don’t inherit money
or assets as such – they inherit structures,” he said.
The “dimmer switch” process tackles a concern families have about
how fast or slowly to educate their kids about what they might
inherit, he continued.
Advisors, can provide an “executive function”, to steer clients
through some complex financial conversations at times when there
can be a lot of emotions in play, Wesley said. In particular,
advisors help frame conversations in a forward-looking way: “It
is about helping clients so that they – and their families – are
equipped to be more proactive and less reactive.”
“The financial advisor becomes a kind of governor in the process
that helps the family regulate the space of disclosure” he said,
hoping that the white paper’s guidance on how advisors can set
conversations will aid them in future.
There is a real need for more advisor training for how they work
with families, which is partly why the white paper was written,
he said.
“Advisors are often wonderful at working with clients about
managing their reactions in markets but in family communication
issues they can be a bit flat-footed,” Wesley said.
The insights into family communication don’t just apply to
transferring money and assets from older to younger people. They
are highly relevant in transfers between siblings, or in
widowhood, divorce, or other transfers involving those of the
same generation.
“There is a really big issue around how to negotiate the social
complexities of wealth,” he said, talking about how wealth
owners/inheritors have to consider their public profiles and
reputations.
Third-generation clients, for example, can be “embarrassed” by
their wealth, or feel intimidated about living up to their
ancestors’ achievements.
“Others are really smart about inheritance…..you decide a
lifestyle that is worthy of your inheritance and you adopt a
stewardship approach and engage in a process,” he said. One
insight, for example, is that inheritors don’t necessarily rush
to give money away but invest it wisely so they can increase the
good they want to do in the world over a much more extended
time.
Among other findings of the white paper, it showed that among the
65 per cent of families that don’t have formal family
communications in place, 15 per cent don’t have family advisors;
11 per cent lack family councils; 11 per cent have no family
succession plans; 11 per cent have no investment policy
statements, and 7 per cent have no mission statement.
For that study, Merrill asked more than 650 high net worth people
across the country how they make different types of financial
decisions and communicate within their family.
The Merrill Center For Family Wealth is part of Merrill Lynch Wealth Management, an arm of Bank of America.