The Mercury News Weekend

How America can remove moral stain of child poverty

- By Nicholas D. Kristof Nicholas D. Kristof is a New York Times columnist.

Imagine you have some neighbors in a mansion down the road who pamper one child with a credit card, the best private school and a Tesla.

The parents treat most of their other kids decently but not lavishly — and then you discover that the family consigns one child to an unheated, vermin-infested room in the basement, denying her dental care and often leaving her without food.

You’d call 911 to report child abuse. You’d say those responsibl­e should be locked up.

But that’s us. That household, writ large, is America and our moral stain of child poverty.

Some American children attend $70,000-ayear nursery schools, but 12 million kids live in households that lack food. The United States has long had one of the highest rates of child poverty in the advanced world — and then the coronaviru­s pandemic aggravated the suffering.

Now we could have a thrilling breakthrou­gh: President Joe Biden included a proposal in his $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan that one study says would cut child poverty by half. We in the news media have focused on direct payments to individual­s, but the historic element of Biden’s plan is its effort to slash child poverty.

“The American Rescue Plan is the most ambitious proposal to reduce child poverty ever proposed by an American president,” Jason Furman, a Harvard economist, told me.

A couple of decades from now, America will be pretty much the same whether direct payments end up being $1,000 or $1,400. But this will be a transforme­d nation if we’re able to shrink child poverty on our watch.

So the most distressin­g part of 10 Republican senators’ counterpro­posal to Biden was their decision to drop the plan to curb child poverty. Please, Mr. President, don’t budge on this.

And senators, what are you thinking? Is the supposedly “pro-family” party battling to preserve child poverty?

“So many of them speak about religion and Jesus and children,” Rep. Rosa DeLauro, DConn., told me. “How do you leave behind millions of children and their families living in poverty?”

To their credit, some Republican senators, including Mike Lee of Utah and Marco Rubio of Florida, have spoken positively of elements in the Biden plan against child poverty. But overall what’s astonishin­g is that a program so important to America’s future has received little attention.

“To me, it’s the most transforma­tional thing that’s under discussion, and nobody’s talking about it,” said Luke Shaefer, a poverty expert at the University of Michigan.

The centerpiec­e of the child poverty plan is an expansion of the child tax credit, up to $3,600 a year for young children. This would cost as much as $120 billion a year and, critically, would be paid out monthly to families that earn too little to pay taxes. Even a sum as modest as $3,600 is transforma­tive for many low-income families.

One reason to think that this would be so successful is that many other countries have used similar strategies to cut child poverty by large margins.

Maybe you think this is unaffordab­le? One prominent estimate suggests that child poverty costs the United States about $1 trillion annually in reduced adult productivi­ty, increased crime and higher health care costs — so the question isn’t can we afford to help children, but can we afford not to?

Yes, all this is messy, but other industrial­ized countries manage to do better than we do at helping children, because those countries make it a priority.

Now we can make it our priority, too, helping children and our country alike. As Furman says, “investment­s in children are not just a handout but a hand up.” Let’s empower our nation’s children, and stop abusing them.

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