How did the anti-poverty impact of the Child Tax Credit vary by state? New analysis featured in Brookings-Hamilton Project series on US child poverty

This policy report, released by the The Hamilton Project at The Brookings Institution, investigates state variation in the effects of the 2021 expanded Child Tax Credit on child poverty. It examines differences in these effects by state-level cost of living and by differences in state-level poverty rates. The results show that while the expanded Child Tax Credit resulted in substantial reductions in poverty across the board, poverty reductions were the greatest in those states with relatively lower costs of living and with higher pre-expansion poverty rates.

Related event: Reducing Child Poverty in the United States, features fireside chat with U.S. Senator Michael Bennet

 
 

Report issued by The Hamilton Project at The Brookings Institution. Authored by Bradley Hardy, affiliated CPSP researcher and Georgetown faculty, Sophie Collyer, Research Director, and Christopher Wimer, Director.

The Hamilton Project, an economic initiative at the Brookings Institution, produces evidence-based policy proposals on how to create a growing economy benefiting more Americans and provides a platform for a broad range of leading economic thinkers to introduce innovative and pragmatic policy options into the national debate.

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(Re)Drawing the Line: A Case for Updating the Poverty Measure 

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Government initiatives cut child poverty in New York City in 2021, but many policies are no longer in effect