The Numbers Add Up for ‘Child-Side’ Tax Policies
By Gerald E. Scorse, Progressive Charlestown guest
contributor
A weary America is suffering through the worst public health crisis in more than a century. Covid-19 has taken over 300,000 lives. Parts of the economy have effectively shut down, throwing millions out of work and bankrupting businesses large and small. In the richest country in the world, Thanksgiving dinner for tens of thousands came from food banks at the end of traffic jams stretching for miles.
Now for the good news. Vaccines have arrived sooner than
anybody could have expected. The latest pandemic relief bill should keep a
double-dip recession from setting in. Lastly—if a divided Congress can only
come together—low-income Americans and their kids could get a boost from a
policy guide that few people have ever heard of.
It’s called MVPF, shorthand for
Marginal Value of Public Funds. The lesson it holds for legislators is simple
and powerful: Public monies should go where they deliver the highest return, to
families on the lower end of the income scale. To tax expert and author Len Burman, the idea is a fiscal no-brainer:
“Instead of supply-side tax policy, try child-side tax policy. Investment in kids (especially in families with low incomes) pays huge returns. As adults, they are better educated, healthier, and pay more taxes.”
The MVPF concept comes from a scholarly paper by Harvard economist Nathaniel Hendren and doctoral candidate Ben Sprung-Keyser. They did a long-run cost/benefit analysis of “133 historical policy changes over the past half-century in the United States.” The numbers they arrived at show how much bang various tax policies deliver for the bucks they cost.
Easily the biggest bang comes from programs directed at
kids: “Our results suggest that direct investments in low-income children’s
health and education has historically had the highest MVPFs…Many such policies
have paid for themselves as the government recouped the cost of their initial
expenditures through additional taxes collected” and less need for welfare in
later years.
Thanks to Democrats, Congress ultimately included a bit of
MVPF thinking in the $900 billion stimulus.
Beneficiaries of the Child Tax Credit (CTC) and the Earned
Income Tax Credit (EITC) were in danger of taking a huge hit. The more the
pandemic had already cost them, the more they stood to lose.
Tax credits rise as income rises. For low-wage workers
suddenly without jobs, their lower incomes in 2020 would have meant lower
benefits come tax time this April.
To take just one example, “A
single mother with two children whose earnings fall from $15,000 in 2019 to
$5,000 in 2020 [would have seen] her EITC fall from $5,920 to $2,010 and her
Child Tax Credit fall from $1,875 to $375. That’s a loss of $5,410 in tax
credits on top of her $10,000 loss in wages.”
The relief bill skirted that disaster with a lookback, a
provision that lets CTC and EITC recipients use either 2019 or 2020 incomes on
their upcoming tax returns. (To get that provision, Democrats had to sign on to
a much-derided business tax break for “three-martini lunches”.)
Besides the lookback, there’s also a decent chance that
other MVPF-type legislation could become law in the Biden years.
His campaign tax plan included a proposal to make child care more affordable by upping the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit. He also wants to raise the CTC for at least the duration of the pandemic. As House Ways and Means chairman Richard Neal (D-MA) put it, “If you are talking about tax relief, let’s get tax relief to the lower end of the economic scale.”
Numerous bills taking that direction are already on the Democratic agenda—so numerous that the Tax Policy Center collected them in a 22-page summary with the daunting title “Understanding the Maze of Recent Child and Work Incentive Proposals.”
The summary’s opening sentence goes to the heart of everything that comes after: “Policymakers continue to grapple with the related issues of unequal incomes, relatively poor health, education, and economic outcomes for low-income children, and hardship among low- and moderate income families.”
The proposals are all there for the enacting. Congress should take its cue from MVPF: Spend taxpayer money where it gets the highest return, on low-income families and kids.
This piece first appeared at www.nydailynews.com. Scorse writes on taxes and has published frequently in Progressive Charlestown.