When anti-poverty programs don’t keep up with inflation, families are left behind

The Child Tax Credit and many other government benefits don’t currently increase with inflation. As families across the United States contend with record-high inflation, the values of several government benefits and tax credits meant to provide relief are not keeping up. Policy indexation, an often overlooked aspect of policy design, would fix this.

In this report published by The Century Foundation, we examine the antipoverty potential of one policy, the expanded Child Tax Credit, under different scenarios to shine a spotlight on the importance of inflation indexation for optimizing the antipoverty effects of government policies.


What You Should Know:

  • Antipoverty policies that have higher benefit levels achieve a greater degree of poverty reduction.

  • Antipoverty policy benefits that are not indexed to inflation will have their dollar value erode over time.

  • A Child Tax Credit not indexed to inflation, for example, would lose about a quarter of its value over ten years.

  • Policymakers should include inflation indexation in all antipoverty program benefits to ensure their effectiveness.

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