A process normally giving rise to a permanent
bequeathable property right in a previously unowned thing will not do so if the position of others no longer at liberty to use the thing is thereby worsened...
"The concession", William Decker argues, "is major: the human form cannot (or if it can it must not) be effaced of its past; if it is to be renewed, and kept recognizably human, it will be through the office of
bequeathable resources."
In this particular case, we refer to one that stipulates that the bequest should not exceed the
bequeathable one-third (Al-Bukhari and Muslim).
In what follows, we should first concern ourselves presently with a reflection on Beauvoir's
bequeathable values to posterity, given her radical feminist struggle.
County residents say they realize that some people may think that such wealth flowing through the majority-Black county with parks, lakes, flowers and tree-lined streets is an aberration that is not sustainable, much less "
bequeathable." But county residents say their wealth is indeed sustainable.
Again, following McGarry (1999), we include a dummy variable for whether wealth is high enough to exceed the threshold for taxing
bequeathable wealth, namely $600,000 if single and $1,200,000 if married (the limits at the time).
The concept of retirement savings as
bequeathable wealth challenges
* Inequality in
Bequeathable Wealth--Why is It Important?
If contributors died prior to age seventy, any non-annuitized portion of their PSS account balance would be
bequeathable to their heirs.
Many people die with a large amount of
bequeathable wealth.
For example, funds in an MSA may be
bequeathable, or they may be used to pay for allowable health expenses of family members.