Creating generational wealth takes careful planning and thoughtful sharing of intentions, plus the right investment vehicle.
The Chinese proverb “rags to rags in three generations” says that family wealth does not last for three generations. The first generation makes the money, the second spends it and the third sees none of the wealth.
The Chinese aren’t the only ones who acknowledge this as a problem. In the U.S. it is referenced as “shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations,” and in Japan it’s “rice paddies to rice paddies in three generations.”
These sayings contradict what I hear clients tell me they want their money doing for them after death. After nearly three decades of assisting families with estate planning, what I have found is that the majority have a deep desire to leave a legacy for their family. The idea of leaving a thumbprint on future generations seems to give meaning to what people spend a lifetime accumulating.
So the question is, if people have an inherent desire to leave a legacy for their families, why is there such a high failure rate among generational wealth? I believe the answer lies in how estate planning is defined and how it is approached.
A common definition goes like this: Estate planning is the process of designating who will receive your assets and handle your responsibilities after your death or incapacitation. The very definition of estate planning omits any mention of generational intent. That’s a problem. Once the first generation passes away, the estate plan has essentially fulfilled its purpose once the second generation has access to the estate.
The idea for generational wealth is not new. Two of the most referenced figures related to generational wealth are Cornelius Vanderbilt — whose famous last words to his family were, ”Keep the money together” — and John D. Rockefeller. The Vanderbilt’s didn’t follow their patriarch’s advice, and the family fortune dwindled away, but the Rockefellers heeded the advice and are now in their seventh generation of wealth with billions in assets. There is more to the story that you can listen to here.
The Making of a Generational Plan
Leaving a legacy necessitates a written strategy designed to equip future generations with the information they need to carry out the plans set before them. This written strategy is in addition to traditional estate planning documents. The legal documents are needed to hold the assets, but a written generational plan is what actually keeps the money together.
There are three foundational components needed for you to begin a conversation with your professional team of advisers to create and implement a generational plan. Once you have these worked out, you can begin to build the framework for what could be one of the most meaningful things you ever do for your family.
First: You Need the Right Mindset
When you are thinking about your legacy, it’s helpful for you to “blur the faces” of your heirs. The reason for this is that your goal is to reach as far into the future as possible to include generations you will never meet. At this stage of planning you’re thinking big picture about your legacy, and this is difficult if you have your kids and grandkids front of mind.
It doesn’t mean you can’t have as part of your estate plan specific gifts to living family members, but that is a separate part of this process.
Second: You Need to Be Open with Your Family
You need to be open with your family about your assets and your intentions. In general, people tend to live as if their money, their beliefs, their values and their wishes are a secret and miss the opportunity to communicate knowledge and wisdom to their children or grandchildren.
To have a generational plan(opens in new tab), you cannot have a mindset that assumes everyone in the family knows what you know and that they will learn what to do through osmosis. Your children may have a good education or a successful career, but that does not mean they understand financial or generational planning.
It is the giver’s responsibility to offer guidance and leadership to the family for them to know what to do when you pass away.
I have had clients in my office in tears many times over the fact their parents will not communicate anything with them. In some cases, no guidance is being offered for managing the inheritance coming, and the heirs have to wait until their parents’ death to learn what is going on.
There could be a number of reasons for this situation. Some holders of wealth either don’t care what happens after they pass away or simply do not want to deal with having the conversation. If this is you, then the idea of generational planning may not be for you, and that is OK. It’s your money, and you can do with it what you wish.
But for those who do have generational aspirations, this is an opportunity for you to bring your family together to cast a vision for the wealth you have and outline your vision of a family legacy. This can spark meaningful discussions about what your family stands for, what values you share, what wealth strategies are in place, and outline what to expect as one generation dies and a new one is born.
This has the potential to pave the way for each family member to understand his or her role and responsibility to perpetuate the legacy.
Third: You Need to Put Your Intentions in Writing
Legal documents can be a guide for administering the plan, but the truth is that the heirs of the estate will be the ones instituting the plan after your gone. So it is critical not only that they know and understand your intentions, but that they are put down in writing so that they are transferrable to future generations.
To maintain generational wealth, the goal should be to set specific provisions for how money is to be used, placing restrictions on how money is accessed and how money is to be replenished.
For instance, many of my clients are not interested in helping their kids get out of debt or drive fancy cars. What they really want is to see their family investing in themselves (i.e., a higher education, business startup or expansion and charitable donations that support the family values) while growing the assets in the plan.
Most successful people will tell you that experiencing what it took to create the wealth is also what helps them keep and grow the wealth. What it takes to create wealth is not transferrable to those who have never created wealth for themselves. So, the idea is to offer your heirs the means to be able to get a higher education, to earn more money or to start a business to generate wealth for themselves and experience what it takes to not only create the wealth but to keep it.
Put your plan down in writing, possibly as part of a family constitution or set of bylaws that can be passed down. Each generation has a fiduciary responsibility to carry forward the intentions of the previous generation with the sole purpose to leave the estate better off than it was when they received it for the benefit of the next generation.
How to Keep Your Estate’s Assets Growing for Generations
When you think of money and growing wealth, the tendency is to assume that investments are the primary driver behind the strategy. However, when it comes to a generational plan, a specially designed whole life insurance policy(opens in new tab), I believe, is the primary catalyst for growing and protecting the assets while also providing access to cash.
The reason these contract designs are so effective within generational planning is due to their risk-mitigation characteristics. The inherent features of these contracts (if designed properly) guarantee the results and have everything needed to give a generational plan predictable results one generation at a time:
Guaranteed Death Benefit. A life insurance death benefit is guaranteed to pay a large tax-free lump sum at the insured’s death without the need for taking on market risk. This death benefit has a multiplying effect, because it is purchased using discounted dollars (the total death benefit is greater than the total premiums paid). Once a policy owner passes away within one generation, the death benefit proceeds can be used to purchase new life insurance policies on select people in the next generation; thus creating new wealth for the next generation.
Guaranteed Access to Cash. Through the special design of a whole life policy, the high early cash values offer access to cash through policy loans. This loan privilege allows the beneficiaries of the generational plan to have access to cash while the cash values of the contract continue to grow uninterrupted. Policy loans allow a private banking system to form within the generational plan and allow for unique repayment capabilities, because the insurance company does not require payment on loans until the death of the insured. By keeping money continuously flowing into these policies, new death benefits are established that create new future wealth while simultaneously driving cash values higher, allowing more access to cash.
Guaranteed Cash Values. There are two parts that make up the cash accumulation within these policy designs: the guaranteed cash and dividends. Benefits and guarantees are backed by the claims-paying ability of the insurance company, and dividends are the result of low mortality along with profit sharing of the performance from the insurance companies underlining assets. The total cash value accumulates at a consistent and predictable growth rate that is tax-free and without market risk or volatility concerns. This allows for easy cash flow planning due to having consistent and predictable growth.
Of course, life insurance is not a unicorn and could potentially have unintended consequences if the contracts were mismanaged. For instance,
- Income and growth on accumulated cash values are generally taxable upon withdrawal.
- Adverse tax consequences may result if withdrawals exceed premiums paid into the policy.
- Withdrawals or surrenders made during a surrender charge period may be subject to surrender charges and may reduce the ultimate death benefit and cash value.
- Surrender charges vary by product, issue age, sex, underwriting class and policy year.
- A MEC or Modified Endowment classification can trigger adverse tax consequences by violating IRS funding rules.
- Policy loans and withdrawals will reduce available cash values and death benefits and may cause the policy to lapse, or affect guarantees against lapse.
- Additional premium payments may be required to keep the policy in force.
- In the event of a lapse, outstanding policy loans in excess of unrecovered cost basis will be subject to ordinary income tax.
The Bottom Line on Generational Wealth
To wrap up, the success or failure of a generational plan rests on three things:
- Articulating your vision for the future and getting buy-in from your family for the vision.
- Communicating your vision through a written document that details your vision and equips future generations to carry the plan forward.
- Having proper legal work and life insurance designs in place as the catalyst for bringing your vision to fruition. Finding competent professionals who have a full understanding of generational strategies will be important.
For more information, visit BUILDBanking.com and brianskrobonja.com.