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Child Tax Credit

Harris Campaign: Revenue Effects of Child Tax Credit, EITC, and ACA Premium Subsidy

Vice President Harris recently announced a plan that would increase the Child Tax Credit in two ways, increase the “childless EITC,” and extend the 2021 expansion of Affordable Care Act premium subsidies. As shown in Table 1 below, we estimate a total cost of $2.1 trillion over 10 years. (PWBM will soon post updates of the Harris Campaign proposals. Check back soon.)

Family and Community Inflation Relief Act: Budgetary and Distributional Effects

On July 21st 2022, Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) introduced legislation (text, summary) that would index the value of certain tax benefits to inflation.

White House Build Back Better Framework, Illustrative Permanent Scenario

In order to provide additional context as part of the current reconciliation debate, PWBM has estimated a scenario where all spending and revenue provisions in the Build Back Better Framework are permanent. The table below reflects this alternative. These estimates are neither PWBM’s estimate of any current legislation nor PWBM’s estimates of the Build Back Better Framework released by the White House.

Senator Romney’s Proposed Family Security Act

In early February 2021, Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) proposed the Family Security Act to consolidate several forms of federal child assistance into a single, expanded child benefit to be administered through the Social Security Administration (SSA).

The act would provide a fully-refundable child allowance of $4,200 annually ($350 per month) per child ages 0-5, and $3,000 annually ($250 per month) per child ages 6 through 17. The credit would phase out at a rate of $50 for every additional $1,000 of income above the phase out threshold ($200K single / $400K joint).

The act would also simplify the existing structure of the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), so that the value of the credit is determined by filing status (married or single), and whether or not there are any eligible dependents (the number of dependents would no longer affect the value of the credit).

Other proposed changes to the tax code include elimination of head of household status, elimination of the child and dependent care credit (CDCTC), and elimination of the State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction.

PWBM projects that this proposal would cost $283 billion over the budget window, not including proposed changes to SNAP eligibility and elimination of TANF.

Ways and Means Committee Child Tax Credit Expansion Proposal

In early February 2021, Congressman Richard E. Neal (D-MA), Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, released legislative proposals for COVID-19 economic relief to be considered under the budget reconciliation process. One major element of the proposal is an expansion of the Child Tax Credit (CTC), similar to the plan envisioned in President Biden’s stimulus proposal. The CTC proposal would make the Child Tax Credit fully refundable, and would provide annual benefits of up to $3,600 per child under age 6, and up to $3,000 for children 17 and under. The credit would begin phasing out in value at a rate 5 cents for each additional dollar of income above $75,000 for single filers, $150,000 for married filers, and $112,500 for head of household filers. For tax units with incomes above these phase-out thresholds, the value of the credit would remain unchanged from current law.

PWBM projects that this provision would cost $100 billion. Families in the bottom 80 percent of the income distribution would see an average benefit of over $3,100.

Presidential Candidate Joe Biden’s Proposed Child Tax Credit Expansion

Presidential candidate Joe Biden recently announced a proposal to temporarily expand the Child Tax Credit (CTC). We find that this proposal would cost $110 billion if implemented solely for calendar year 2021 and would cost $1.4 trillion over ten years if extended permanently. While higher income households are more likely to have qualifying children and would see larger average tax cuts ($1160 for the 90-95th percentile), lower income groups would see the largest relative benefit, with after-tax incomes increasing by 9 percent for the bottom quintile. Refer to our analysis of the estimate for more information.

Tax Reform 2.0

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act: Extending Changes to Individual Taxes

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act