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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Business
Michael Hiltzik

Michael Hiltzik: The Child Tax Credit is our greatest antipoverty program. Why is Congress letting it wither?

Here are some documented truths about the federal Child Tax Credit:

— The enhanced credit, enacted in March 2021 as part of the American Rescue Plan, the government's pandemic relief package, reduced the child poverty rate by about 30%, keeping as many as 3.7 million children out of poverty by the end of that year.

— When the enhancements expired in January, the child poverty rate spiked to 17% from 12.1%, plunging 3.7 million children back under the poverty line. The impact was much worse on Black, Latino and Asian children than on white ones.

— The credit, which was paid out in monthly installments from July through December 2021 with the balance paid out as tax refunds in early 2022, had no detectable impact on the inflation rate.

— The vast majority of families used the payments to benefit their children, to build savings and to pay down debt. A vanishingly small proportion spent it on frivolities or on drug or alcohol.

— The chances that the lame duck Congress will restore the Child Tax Credit to its 2021 level are virtually nil. Next year, when Republicans control the House? Less than nil.

Something doesn't compute here. The Child Tax Credit worked superbly well to fulfill its goals, yet it gets no love from Congress. Someone needs to explain this. I will, but be forewarned: The explanation tells an ugly story about America's political leadership and our economy's embedded inequality.

"In the richest country in the world, there should not be a single child who cannot eat in the morning or who is living in a car," says Claudia Sahm, former Federal Reserve economist, the founder of a consulting firm bearing her name and close follower of economic inequality trends.

Let's take a brief detour to examine how the American Rescue Act improved the Child Tax Credit, which was originally established in 1997.

To begin with, the credit was increased to an annual $3,000 per child ($3,600 for children under age 6), from $2,000 per child. It raised the maximum age of children eligible for the credit to 17 from 16.

Even more important, the credit was made fully refundable, meaning that it went to families regardless of whether or how much they paid in federal income taxes. The ARP eliminated the preexisting program's work incentives, which reduced the credit for lower-income families.

In 2021, the half the annual credit was paid at the rate of up to $300 monthly per child up to age 6, and $250 monthly for children age 6 to 17. The rest was paid out when families filed their income tax returns.

The old provisions were restored when the ARP enhancements expired at the end of 2021. The maximum credit fell back to $2,000 per child, paid annually, and the payout was again tied to family income.

That turned the program's benefits on their head by denying the neediest families the most help and rewarding the richest (up to the income limits of $400,000 for couples and $200,00 for single parents).

Under the current rules, for example, married parents with two children and earnings of $400,000 receive the full $4,000 in annual benefits; a single parent with two children and earnings of $15,000 will receive only $1,875, and a family with income so low they don't have income tax liability get nothing.

About 19 million children under 17 receive a reduced credit or no credit at all because of the income phase-in.

As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reckons, this effect falls especially hard on Black children, 45% of whom fall into the reduced or zeroed-out category; Latino children (39%); and American Indian or Alaskan native children (38%), but only 17% of white children — "long standing inequities" that were temporarily redressed by the ARP.

As Sahm has pointed out, the enhanced credits were a proof-of-concept that cash benefits are best at fighting poverty. They're flexible, leaving it up to families to determine their most pressing needs and decide how best to deploy the financial assistance.

Opposition to continuing the 2021 Child Tax Credit is generally based on ancient conservative shibboleths and misconceptions about poverty.

One is the notion that assistance recipients can't be trusted to spend their money wisely.

The claim that recipients left to their own devices will spend their benefits on drugs and drink or crab legs or tattoos has always been a fantasy of ignorant conservatives, tied closely to racism and the denigration of the poor as morally bankrupt (or they wouldn't be poor, you see).

Studies of how low-income households actually spend their assistance checks consistently show that the money goes to rent, home-cooked food, transportation and clothing. In fact, households receiving assistance generally spend larger portions of their total income on those essentials than households that don't need financial help.

Another is the assertion that cash assistance discourages work. This tenet motivated red states to impose work requirements on enrollees in expanded Medicaid programs under the Affordable Care Act. One would have hoped that the record of those provisions put the idea in the grave that work requirements increase employment. Sadly, it hasn't.

The record showed that work requirements didn't help employment trends at all, made the Medicaid programs more expensive, not less, and forced thousands of people off the Medicaid rolls, threatening their health. Nevertheless, politicians still think they're some sort of a panacea, though for what isn't clear.

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) declared earlier this year that he would endorse restoring the higher benefits of the Child Tax Credit, but only if work requirements were part of the package, eliminating benefits for families with caregivers at home. (The chances that Romney, with an estimated $250-million net worth, understands the economic position of low-income families are almost nonexistent.)

Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W. Va.) refused last year to accept an extension of the Child Tax Credit enhancements unless they came with work requirements. "Don't you think, if we're going to help the children, that the people should make some effort?" Manchin said on CNN, displaying his conviction that recipients of the credit were layabouts and malingerers.

As I pointed out earlier this year, Manchin had some nerve blocking the extension, since his home state boasted the fourth-worst rate of child poverty in the nation and fifth-worst in extreme child poverty. Who does Manchin represent, again?

Other arguments against expanding the credit draw heavily from the traditional far-right textbook. Just a few days ago, the Heritage Foundation contended that extending the credit would "undermine the economy, self-support, social well-being, and upward mobility."

The Heritage screed asserted that cash aid "weakens marriage and increases abortion," a claim for which no evidence exists whatsoever. It also cited a paper from the University of Chicago finding that removing the work requirements from the Child Tax Credit would lead to 1.5 million workers exiting the labor force. Heritage noted that the departing workers accounted for 2.6% of working parents, but not that it represented less than 1% of all civilian workers.

All these objections, including the unsupported claim that the credit drove inflation, overlook the fundamental misconception about the program — it's typically treated as a government expenditure. But that's wrong: It's manifestly an investment in the next generation and the nation's future, with an immense long-term return.

It's not only about the moral imperative to keep today's children out of poverty.

"We're leaving money on the table," Sahm told me. "If they have the opportunity to flourish, to be healthy, to have a childhood, these children are going to be much more productive. They will be workers someday, and by making the Child Tax Credit a workforce program for adults now, we are undermining the workforce of the future."

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