Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

GOP fights child tax credit.

- Nicholas Wu

WASHINGTON – Democrats’ $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill includes a proposed change to the tax code aimed at pulling millions of children out of poverty, but it’s likely to see Republican objections as the Senate considers President Joe Biden’s plan this week.

Democrats want to increase the child tax credit up to $3,600 per child younger than age 6 and $3,000 for children up to age 17 for one year to help combat the economic damage of the pandemic. Some liberals are pushing to make the tax credit permanent. The current tax credit is up to $2,000 per child.

Advocates hailed the proposal as a tool to fight child poverty by opening the credit to working families who did not qualify because their income was too low.

Republican­s have derided the tax credit as not relevant in a COVID-19 relief package and oppose efforts to make it permanent.

The House passed Biden’s plan last week, Senate debate could start as soon as Wednesday, and a vote is likely by the end of the week. The House would need to approve the bill again if the Senate makes changes, meaning the bill could get a final vote Monday before heading to Biden.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., predicted Democrats would pass the bill, saying Tuesday he did not think there would be any Senate changes “so egregious” it would fail when it returned to the House.

Democrats’ proposal would expand the tax credit from $2,000 to $3,600 and expand eligibilit­y to families who make no or very little income each year.

A National Bureau of Economic Research report last year estimated that most children living in the bottom 10% of incomes were “completely ineligible” for the credit and that the bottom 30% could receive only a partial credit. Half of Black and Latino children were eligible for the full credit.

The left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities estimated Democrats’ changes would lift 9.9 million children above or closer to the poverty line. Many would be Black, Latino or Asian American children whose families did not qualify because their household incomes are too low to qualify for the tax credit.

Democrats’ first draft of the bill turned the child tax credit into a monthly refund, but the final House draft made the credit a “periodic” payment, potentiall­y a quarterly one, to survive procedural challenges in the Senate. Payments would start in July 2021 based on 2019 or 2020 tax returns.

The $2,000 tax credit has been in effect since a Republican-led tax overhaul in 2017 and is an annual tax credit. Families are eligible to receive up to $1,400 per child if the amount of tax credit exceeds the amount of taxes owed. It phases out when incomes exceed $400,000 for a household or $200,000 for individual­s.

The revised credit would phase out when incomes exceeded $150,000 for a household or $75,000 for individual­s.

According to the Joint Congressio­nal Committee on Taxation, a nonpartisa­n congressio­nal panel, the proposal could cost more than $110 billion for the year the expanded credit was in effect.

Democrats strongly support the proposal, and it is likely to remain in the final version of the bill the Senate is working on this week.

It is unlikely the final package will pass with Republican support in the Senate. Many Republican senators oppose the $1.9 trillion price tag and the inclusion of provisions they call irrelevant to COVID-19 relief.

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