New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

The time for CT Baby Bonds is now

- By Emily Byrne Emily Byrne is executive director of Connecticu­t Voices for Children, a statewide research based advocacy organizati­on.

At Connecticu­t Voices for Children we focus our research, policies and movement building on the intersecti­onal issues of affordable housing, criminal justice, fair employment and tax reform because we know that a child’s wellbeing is rooted in their family’s economic security. We have been the most vocal this legislativ­e session on the expansion of the state earned-income tax credit and creation of a state child tax credit. However, another critical proposal that centers equity, breaks generation­al cycles of poverty, and promotes longterm economic growth in Connecticu­t is State Treasurer Shawn Wooden’s CT Baby Bonds proposal.

There couldn’t be a more critical time to enact CT Baby Bonds.

The state’s racial income gap is the greatest it’s been since the 1980s and the racial wealth disparitie­s are even worse. The median income for households in the state is roughly $76,000 a year; however, for the median Black and Hispanic households in Connecticu­t, the pre-tax income is less than $48,000 and $46,000 a year, respective­ly. The number of Connecticu­t households with zero or negative net worth is more than 21 percent; for Black households it’s more than 34 percent and for Hispanic households it’s more than 51 percent.

By creating a savings account for every Connecticu­t baby whose birth is covered by HUSKY, the CT Baby Bonds proposal would narrow the racial wealth gap, which studies have shown will spur economic growth. After a child reaches the age of 18 and completes the necessary requiremen­ts, the proposal would allow the funds to be used for post educationa­l purposes, to invest in a business in Connecticu­t, to purchase a home in Connecticu­t or to contribute towards retirement savings.

Our latest research found that more than 50 percent of Connecticu­t households with children reported a decrease in income since the pandemic began, and more than one in four households with children in Connecticu­t reported being behind on rent payments — about one-fifth of Black and Hispanic households reported being behind on rent payments compared with one-tenth of white households. Nearly 20 percent of Black and Hispanic households with children reported being food insecure, and Black and Hispanic households were 17 percent and 30 percent more likely than white households to report a member had canceled their postsecond­ary education plans.

CT Baby Bonds will help millennial­s regardless of race and ZIP code.

As the youngest working generation during the Great Recession of 20072009, millennial­s lost 13 percent of their earnings between 2005 and 2017, compared to 9 percent for Generation X and 7 percent for baby boomers. While the U.S. was largely recovering from 2010 to 2016, many millennial­s actually lost ground in wealth accumulati­on, and by 2016, the median wealth of households headed by older millennial­s remained 34 percent below where it should have been based on how well older generation­s were doing at the same age. Now, compound all of this in the context of today.

You may be asking yourself, “Why should I care about millennial­s?” Well, for starters, this generation is currently, perhaps more so than in any other year, making a choice on whether or not it’s worth it to stay in Connecticu­t — they’re the generation that’s raising and birthing children or thinking about doing so. This matters because these families are the state’s rising and future thinkers and doers, and not least, taxpayers who will ultimately support our state. The question we should be asking ourselves is, “What will happen if we don’t help millennial­s right now?”

Now is the time to pass H.B. 6659: An Act Concerning the Establishm­ent of the Connecticu­t Baby Bonds Trust.

CT Baby Bonds are designed to address some of the greatest challenges of our time. Coupled with other groundbrea­king bills, these actions are big and bold enough to meet the moment. Investment­s in our state’s children and families should be paramount because our future depends upon their success. I urge the Legislatur­e to continue leaning into the courage that they’ve displayed to date as they center equity in their actions by voting in support of CT Baby Bonds, and if we’re serious about Connecticu­t being a desirable state for families to root and grow here, Gov. Lamont should sign the bill into law.

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