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Opinion
The following is presented as part of The Columbian’s Opinion content, which offers a point of view in order to provoke thought and debate of civic issues. Opinions represent the viewpoint of the author. Unsigned editorials represent the consensus opinion of The Columbian’s editorial board, which operates independently of the news department.
News / Opinion / Columns

Other Papers Say: Pass expanded Child Tax Credit

By New York Daily News
Published: January 27, 2024, 6:01am

The following editorial originally appeared in the New York Daily News:

Good, bipartisan ideas that meaningfully improve the lives of millions of Americans sometimes make it through the otherwise partisanship-plagued, soul-sapping, progress-thwarting machine called the United States Congress. This time, Republicans and Democrats have struck a $78 billion tax agreement that expands refundable child tax credits to help families with lower incomes.

Here’s hoping that it gets a serious hearing in the U.S. House, where many right-wing Republicans are eager to kill it in the crib.

The proposal, crafted by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden and Ways and Means Chairman Jason Smith, builds on lessons learned during COVID, when the American Rescue Plan upped the federal Child Tax Credit from $2,000 to $3,600 for qualifying children under the age of 6, and to $3,000 for older children up to age 17. Previously, only kids 16 and younger qualified.

Most importantly, by making the credit fully refundable, families who wouldn’t otherwise have qualified because their income was too low — meaning, they didn’t owe any federal taxes — were finally dealt in.

The expanded credit, delivered to many via monthly advance payments, slashed child poverty as few other measures ever have. Driven by it and other measures, child poverty fell to its lowest level on record in 2021, just 5.2 percent.

Predictably, Congress let the benefit expire.

Just as predictably, that led to a sharp one-year increase in child poverty, from 5.2 percent in 2021 to 12.4 percent in 2022. About 1 in 3 kids didn’t get the full credit, and these were, according to Columbia’s Center on Poverty and Social Policy, disproportionately “children of color, young children, children in single-parent families, children in larger families” and “children in rural areas.”

Actions and inaction both have consequences. Poverty is not just lack of spending money for toys and candy; it coincides with increased risk of homelessness, hunger, inadequate educational opportunities and more.

The revived credit doesn’t do everything the 2021 version did, but it ups the maximum credit over time and adjusts the rules in ways beneficial for struggling families, so that everyone who earns $14,000 a year or more will qualify for the full refundable credit.

The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities says that taken together, the measures will lift around 400,000 kids out of poverty and make 3 million poor kids better off than they were before — this year alone. The numbers would get better still next year.

The deal by Wyden and Smith connects the child tax credit to reviving some expired business tax cuts passed during the Trump administration. While it’s a bit dispiriting to think that a measure proven to lift hundreds of thousands of kids out of dire economic straits requires such a sweetener, it’ll be well worth the cost.

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