The Costs and Benefits of Expanding the Empire State Child Tax Credit in New York City</a>

The Costs and Benefits of Expanding the Empire State Child Tax Credit in New York City

Research finds that cash and near-cash benefits increase children’s health, education, and future earnings while also decreasing costs with respect to health, child protection, and criminal justice. We find that expanding the Empire State Tax Credit to $1,000 per child for all children in New York City under 17, with the exception of high-income families, would cost about $1.1 billion and would generate about $9.8 billion in benefits to society.

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The Costs and Benefits of Expanding the Empire State Child Tax Credit

The Costs and Benefits of Expanding the Empire State Child Tax Credit

Research finds that cash and near-cash benefits increase children’s health, education, and future earnings while also decreasing costs with respect to health, child protection, and criminal justice. We find that expanding the Empire State Tax Credit to $1,000 per child for all children in New York State under 17, with the exception of high-income families, would cost about $2.7 billion and would generate about $26.2 billion in benefits to society.

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Children Left Behind in Larger Families: The Uneven Receipt of the Federal Child Tax Credit</a>
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Children Left Behind in Larger Families: The Uneven Receipt of the Federal Child Tax Credit

Building on our previous work, this brief examines the variation in Child Tax Credit receipt by family size. The findings show that children in larger families are more likely to be left out of the full Child Tax Credit than children in smaller families because the earnings required to access the full credit increases with the number of children in the family.

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Children Losing Out: The Geographic Distribution of the Federal Child Tax Credit</a>
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Children Losing Out: The Geographic Distribution of the Federal Child Tax Credit

Building off of previous work, this brief examines the variation in Child Tax Credit receipt by state and congressional district, finding that children in areas where incomes are lower and poverty rates are higher are those most likely to be left out. These results suggest that proposals to extend the Child Tax Credit to families who are currently losing out could have a substantial impact on child poverty in the United States.

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Left Behind: The One-Third of Children in Families Who Earn Too Little to Get the Full Child Tax Credit
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Left Behind: The One-Third of Children in Families Who Earn Too Little to Get the Full Child Tax Credit

The current federal Child Tax Credit provides up to $2,000 per child per year to qualifying children, but low-income families lose out because they do not have enough earnings to qualify for the full benefit. This brief documents who is currently “left behind” in terms of realizing the full benefits of the federal Child Tax Credit because of the CTC’s earnings requirement, finding that those left out are disproportionately children of color, those in families with young children, those with single parents, and those who reside in rural areas.

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