Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Biden’s child tax credit as a monthly check is problemati­c

- By Michael R. Strain Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Joe Biden hasn’t been in the White House for three months, so it’s way too soon to justify the claim that he has already joined the ranks of transforma­tional presidents. But one Biden initiative that really could be game-changing is his plan to give U.S. households a monthly check based on the number of children they have.

Progressiv­es celebrate the program as an antidote to child poverty. Conservati­ves fret that it will give low-income parents the opportunit­y to avoid work.

Those views are worth discussing, but both miss the real problem. The group of Americans for whom the child-allowance might be transforma­tional is the middle class. And the most concerning aspect isn’t its generosity. It lurks behind the decision to distribute it to households as a monthly check, rather than a once-a-year payment bundled with tax refunds.

The 2017 tax law doubled the child credit to $2,000 per child. It also made the credit partially refundable, so that a household that didn’t owe any income tax was eligible for a refund payment of up to $1,400 per child. To receive the credit, a taxpayer had to earn at least $2,500.

The $1.9 trillion pandemic relief law Biden signed last month expanded the credit even further, boosting it to $3,600 for each child under age 6 and $3,000 per older child. It also waived the annual earnings requiremen­t and made the credit fully refundable. The changes will only be in effect this year, but Biden and congressio­nal Democrats hope to extend them.

A household with two young kids and no earnings will receive $7,200 from the expanded child credit. That’s a lot more than the $2,800 this household would have received prior to the relief law. And previously, the household would have needed to earn at least $2,500 to get the credit.

The more generous credit will probably cut employment. But I wouldn’t expect the drop to be large because the structure of the credit doesn’t penalize labor income — for low-income households, the size of the child allowance doesn’t shrink as earnings increase. And the extra money will have a significan­t impact on poverty. My American Enterprise Institute colleagues Alex Brill, Kyle Pomerleau and Grant Seiter estimated it will cut child poverty by one-third.

As important as this is, it is not a new paradigm for anti-poverty policy. It is simply ratcheting up the generosity of a program that has been expanded by presidents of both parties over several decades.

But while the expanded scale doesn’t represent a paradigm shift in anti-poverty policy, the payment structure might represent one — and not for the poor, but for the middle class.

By distributi­ng the child allowance as monthly income, the government would encourage middle-class parents to stop thinking of it as a tax break. Instead, it might start to feel like a … monthly income.

This has the potential to change the relationsh­ip between the citizen and the state. The poor and the elderly already receive regular assistance from the government with Social Security checks or monthly deposits to their food stamp accounts. But government assistance to the vast middle is more opaque, hidden in places like tax breaks for health insurance, college savings and mortgage interest. And while the middle class welcomes this assistance, it is notably tied to specific expenses.

Cash is different. Monthly child-allowance checks would bring assistance front and center. After a few years, it might become commonly assumed that the government should provide regular cash assistance to households with kids, even to those earning six-figure salaries.

These monthly checks would be frontof-mind and popular among a large group of Americans who are likely to vote. That would tempt politician­s to crank them up, making them more generous, and to argue that the government should also be picking up part of the tab for other expenses. This actually could create a paradigm shift.

According to calculatio­ns by Seiter, the child allowance will boost household income by $101 billion this year. Just $36 billion of that will go to households in poverty. Supporters have characteri­zed the program as a boon to the poor, but it’s more a program for the middle class.

Society has a special obligation to the poor, and fighting poverty is a worthy use of public funds. But the amount of financial assistance Biden wants to give to better-off households is excessive.

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