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Tag: Child Tax Credit

  • Why boosting the Child Tax Credit has become a key issue for Harris and Trump

    Why boosting the Child Tax Credit has become a key issue for Harris and Trump

    Norristown, Pennsylvania — If anyone knows how expensive it is to raise a child, it’s Raegen Selden, an office manager in Norristown, Pennsylvania. She has raised six children who range in age from 12 to 25.

    “I have two sons who are hungry every second, every minute of the day,” Selden said. “I have daughters who would like to think that they eat dainty, but they don’t.”

    Her family has always relied on the federal Child Tax Credit, first created in 1997, to help make ends meet. During the pandemic, the credit was boosted temporarily from $2,000 to $3,000 per child, and up to $3,600 for families with children under the age of 6.

    The move helped cut U.S. child poverty by 46%, according to a 2022 report from the U.S. Census Bureau.

    “Bills still needed to be paid and things still needed to be bought,” Selden said. “And it was a comfort in knowing that you had this extra income.”

    It costs an estimated $310,000 to raise a child from birth to age 18, the Brookings Institution found in a 2022 report. One of the few things both presidential candidates agree on is that the Child Tax Credit should get a big boost.

    Former President Donald Trump’s campaign is proposing a $5,000 per child yearly tax credit. Vice President Kamala Harris is proposing a credit of up to $3,600 per child, with a bump to $6,000 for newborns.

    Trump wants the credit to go to all families regardless of income, while Harris would restrict the credit to low and middle-income families only. She would also make the credit “refundable,” meaning even parents who don’t pay taxes would get the credit in cash.

    “This is a really exciting moment,” University of Maryland economics professor Melissa Kearney told CBS News. “…We have tons of evidence that supplementing the income of low-income families with children really meaningfully improves those children’s lives. We see they do better in school. Their health outcomes are improved in ways that persist into their adulthood.”

    The cost has always been a sticking point. A bill to expand the credit failed in the Senate just last month.

    Selden believes parents should receive a Child Tax Credit because their children “are taking care of our future.”

    “We want them to grow up to be great, productive citizens in this country,” she added. “And it’s like you can’t do that if they can’t eat.”

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  • JD Vance wants a $5,000 Child Tax Credit, or 150% more than the current CTC. Here’s what to know.

    JD Vance wants a $5,000 Child Tax Credit, or 150% more than the current CTC. Here’s what to know.

    Sen. JD Vance, the Republican vice-presidential nominee, says he wants to boost the Child Tax Credit to $5,000 per child from its current $2,000 — an effort that could add trillions in federal spending, according to policy experts. 

    “I’d love to see a child tax credit that’s $5,000 per child,” Vance said on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” on Sunday. “President Trump has been on the record for a long time supporting a bigger child tax credit, and I think you want it to apply to all American families.”

    Vance’s idea for boosting the Child Tax Credit by 150% comes less than two weeks after a bill that would have provided a modest expansion in the tax benefit failed in the Senate due to Republican opposition. Supporters of an expanded CTC argue that it would help low- and middle-income families navigate the costs of raising a child, but it’s also likely to come with a big price tag for the federal government, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan think tank focused on fiscal policy issues.

    “We could easily be talking about $2-$3 trillion in additional borrowing over the next decade,” Marc Goldwein, senior policy director for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, told CBS MoneyWatch. “That’s a tremendous amount of money.”

    But Vance didn’t provide many details about how he would expand the CTC, which makes it difficult to pinpoint the exact cost, Goldwein added. For instance, Vance didn’t disclose if he envisions a fully refundable $5,000 CTC, meaning that people who claim it could receive the entire amount as a tax refund. That would make it more expensive than if it were partially refundable, as the CTC currently is. 

    Vance hinted that he would like to see an expanded CTC without income thresholds, as the current tax credit phases out for single filers earning over $200,000 and married couples with more than $400,000 in income. 

    “You don’t want a different policy for higher income families,” he noted. “You just want to have a pro-family Child Tax Credit.”

    No-vote on bill to expand the CTC

    Vance, though, didn’t vote on the failed Senate bill that would have expanded the CTC to provide more benefits to low-income families. Asked on “Face the Nation” about this, Vance called it a “show vote,” and added that it would have failed even if he had been there. 

    Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon who co-sponsored the failed bill, pointed to Vance’s no-vote as undermining his statements in support of an expanded CTC. 

    “If JD Vance sincerely gave a whit about working families in America, he would have shown up in the Senate a week and a half ago and voted for my proposal to expand the child tax credit and help 16 million low income kids get ahead,” Wyden said in a Sunday statement. “He didn’t even care enough to use his platform to call on his Senate Republican colleagues to support it.”

    How much is the CTC? 

    The CTC currently stands at $2,000, but during the pandemic it had a temporary expansion that boosted the benefit to as much as $3,600 per child. That helped lift more than 2 million children out of poverty, according to U.S. Census data.

    But the CTC is facing another major change: In 2026, the tax credit will revert back to $1,000 per child. That’s because the benefit was doubled to $2,000 per child by former President Donald Trump’s Tax Cuts & Jobs Act, which went into effect in 2018. But many of the TCJA’s provisions, including the more generous CTC, expire at the end of 2025. 

    Vance, meanwhile, has advocated for policies that would encourage Americans to have more children, but even boosting the CTC by 150% isn’t likely to move the needle much, Goldwein noted. 

    The cost of raising a child from birth to age 18 is about $240,000, according to a 2023 study. Some countries that sought to boost their birth rates by providing payments have had mixed results, such as Australia, which started a “baby bonus” about two decades ago. Its birth rate bumped up in the following few years, but has since sunk to a lower rate than when the benefit was first introduced, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

    “$5,000 a year, it’s going to lighten the load, but won’t cover all those costs,” Goldwein noted. “Financial benefits don’t move the needle much in fertility.”

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  • House approves expansion for the Child Tax Credit. Here’s who could benefit.

    House approves expansion for the Child Tax Credit. Here’s who could benefit.


    The Child Tax Credit is one step closer to getting an overhaul, with the House on Wednesday approving a bill that would expand the valuable credit for parents as well as extend some business tax credits. 

    The bill, called the Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act of 2024, was approved with bipartisan support in the House, and will head to the Senate next, although a date for a vote has yet to be scheduled . 

    The push to overhaul the tax benefit comes more than two years after the expiration of the expanded Child Tax Credit, which bolstered the tax credit to as much as $3,600 per child, up from its current $2,000 per child. Since that expansion expired, policymakers and anti-poverty advocates have pushed lawmakers to beef up the CTC once again, pointing to evidence that its pandemic-era expansion lifted millions of children out of poverty.

    “In its first year, the Child Tax Credit proposal would lift as many as 400,000 children above the poverty line and give more financial support to an additional 3 million children in families with incomes below the poverty line,” noted Sharon Parrott, president of the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, in a statement after the House passed the measure.

    Some family advocates pointed out that the bill falls short of the CTC’s expansion during the pandemic, when half of the tax benefit was paid out via six monthly checks during the second half of 2021. That provided parents with hundreds of dollars per month for each child, extra money that was typically used for preschool, clothing and other kid-related costs.

    The proposed expansion wouldn’t bring back the monthly checks to parents, but would make other important changes. Here’s what to know about the House bill.

    Child tax credit details

    The House bill’s CTC expansion would make it easier for more families to qualify for the Child Tax Credit. 

    That’s because the original CTC requires a parent to have at least $2,500 in annual income, which means that a family with little or no income may not qualify for the CTC. 

    Under the proposed changes, taxpayers could use their income from either the current or prior year in calculating the CTC, which is helpful if their income drops and they can’t qualify for the tax credit. This would go into effect with the 2024 tax year. 

    The new law would also fix an issue that limits the CTC for some poor families: The current CTC provides no credit for a family’s first $2,500 of income. For earnings above that amount, the CTC is based on multiplying a parent’s income by 15%. The new calculation would multiply the parent’s income by 15% as well as by the family’s number of children. 

    That’s an important change because it means families with two or more children and low incomes can qualify for a bigger CTC. Take the example of a single parent with two children who earns $13,000 annually, as outlined by the CBPP.

    The current CTC limits their qualifying earnings to $10,500 because their first $2,500 of income isn’t counted. Multiply that $10,500 by 15%, and the parent’s maximum CTC is a credit of $1,575. 

    Under the proposedchanges, the parent could receive $1,575 per child because of the tweak to add the family’s number of children to the calculation. In effect, the parent’s CTC would double to $3,150 for each tax year.

    How much is the new Child Tax Credit?

    If the new tax deal is passed by the Senate, the CTC amount will remain at $2,000 per child. But a third tweak to the credit could mean that more families will get more money back in their tax refund. 

    That’s due to changes to the partially refundable nature of the CTC, which provides up to $1,600 back in your annual tax refund if you don’t owe taxes or you are getting a refund. 

    Under the proposed bill, the maximum refundable amount per child would rise to $1,800 in 2023, $1,900 in 2024 and $2,000 in 2025. 

    What else would change with the Child Tax Credit?

    Millions of families would benefit from an annual adjustment for inflation in 2024 and 2025. For instance, if inflation is 5% for one of those tax years, the CTC would be adjusted upwards by $100. 

    Who gets Child Tax Credit?

    According to the IRS, children with a Social Security number and who are under the age of 17 by the end of the calendar year are eligible for the CTC.

    Parents can claim the CTC for each qualifying child if the child has lived with them for more than half the year and can be claimed on their tax return as a dependent. The credit can also be claimed by foster parents as well as other relatives, such as grandparents or stepparents, as long as the child meets the IRS’ eligibility requirements. 

    Income limits for the Child Tax Credit

    In addition to the eligibility requirements noted above, the CTC includes income limits. 

    High-income households may be limited in the amount they can claim from the CTC. Only single filers with adjusted gross incomes below $200,000 and joint filers with less than $400,000 can receive the full credit. The CTC amount is whittled down by $50 for every $1,000 above those thresholds.

    When will the Senate vote on the Child Tax Credit?

    Right now, there’s no vote yet on the schedule, but Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer said that he supports the bill and is “working with [Finance Committee chair] Sen. Wyden to figure out the best way forward,” according to CNBC. 



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  • What Nikki Haley said about child tax credits

    What Nikki Haley said about child tax credits

    Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley on Thursday said she would support child tax credits for “everyone,” while adding such credits have harmed some people.

    Haley, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and South Carolina governor, made the comments during a CNN town hall at New England College in Henniker, New Hampshire.

    CNN moderator Jake Tapper said Haley’s political group, Stand For America, once referred to a previous version of the child tax credit as “no-strings-attached welfare handouts.” After noting these credits “cut child poverty in half,” Tapper asked Haley if she’s against expanding child tax credits to help more low-income families.

    “I’m for child care tax credits for everyone. If you’re going do it, do it across the board and make sure that it’s fair,” she said.

    Republican presidential candidate and former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley on Thursday speaks during a campaign stop at the historic Robie Country Store in Hooksett, New Hampshire. During a later CNN town hall, Haley discussed what she would do about the child tax credit if she wins the presidency.
    Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    Haley continued by saying that when evaluating welfare systems, “the goal that I want to look at is what are we doing to lift them up.”

    She then spoke of her time as governor, saying she worked to help people on welfare find work with businesses that would train them.

    “We moved 35,000 people from welfare to work. We had family parties so that we could celebrate the fact that they were now contributing members of society,” she said.

    “Don’t just give handouts. What are you doing to lift them up to? And if you’re going to do tax credits, do it for everybody. Don’t play favorites. Don’t pick winners and losers,” she continued. “That’s not what we do in America.”

    The GOP hopeful then described how tax credits could have a negative impact on some Americans.

    “When you just throw out a tax credit and say, ‘We’re going give it to these people or give it to these people’—that’s not sustaining anything, that’s actually harming them. Instead, let’s do the harder work and say, ‘What can we do to get them into a better situation?’” Haley said.

    CNN’s town hall with Haley took place days before New Hampshire’s Tuesday primary. Her campaign will look to benefit from former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie withdrawing from the GOP race last week.

    A CNN poll released on January 9 conducted by the University of New Hampshire (UNH) pointed to how Christie’s followers could help Haley. The poll found Haley had shaved Trump’s lead in the New Hampshire primary race to 7 percentage points. If Haley gains a sizable portion of Christie’s supporters, she may take the win in the state during its January 23 primary.

    The CNN/UNH poll found 39 percent of likely Republican primary voters in New Hampshire said they would vote for Trump, compared to 32 percent who support Haley. However, the same poll showed 12 percent of the GOP voters said they would back Christie.