Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Funds are fulfilling needs

Most parents use child tax credit on food, bills, necessitie­s, survey finds

- By Casey Parks

WASHINGTON — As the House advanced legislatio­n to extend President Joe Biden’s expanded child tax credit, a new national survey shows that the benefit has reduced families’ financial stress and helped them afford necessitie­s but that Hispanic parents remain less likely to claim it than white and Black families.

The survey — which was administer­ed by the polling firm Ipsos in consultati­on with the Center for Law and Social Policy, researcher­s from the University of California at Berkeley and others — was conducted in October, after most families had received three rounds of payments.

Families across the income spectrum have long qualified for some form of tax relief, but this year as part of the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief measure, the Biden administra­tion began allowing parents to receive half of their refunds in advance through small monthly payments. Under the previous child tax credit, families received a lump benefit of up to $2,000 per child off their tax bills. Parents can now receive $250 per month for each child between ages 6 and 17, and $300 for each under age 6, for up to $3,600 per child.

The installmen­ts have made a difference for low-income families, said Ashley Burnside, a policy analyst for the Center for Law and Social Policy.

“The monthly payments make it easier for parents to budget for financial emergencie­s that can come up throughout the year,” Ms. Burnside said. “It makes it easier for them to afford expenses as they come up, and it’s something that they can rely on as they budget, knowing that they’ll be getting $300 per month per child, ages 0 through 5.”

Ms. Burnside’s partners surveyed more than 1,000 families, all of whom earned less than $75,000 a year, and found that more than

three-fourths had claimed the benefit and that 66% were receiving the monthly checks. A majority of respondent­s said they planned to use the payments on bills, food and clothes. Nearly 70% of respondent­s who reported getting the monthly checks said the payments made them feel less stressed about money.

This month, researcher­s at the Census Bureau found that 3 in 10 families who received the payments used them on school expenses, while 1 in 4 families with young children used them to cover child-care costs. Bureau officials also found, through data gleaned via its Household Pulse Survey, that fewer households with children experience­d food insufficie­ncy after the introducti­on of tax credit payments.

About 36 million eligible families received a check this month, according to the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department.

Still, disparitie­s remain.

While 76% of white and Black families claimed the benefit, only 64% of Hispanic parents did. Parents with less than a high school diploma also had lower take-up rates. Just 63% claimed the benefit, compared with 85% of parents who have at least a two-year degree.

“We’re concerned because, of course, we want everybody who’s eligible for it to access these payments,” Ms. Burnside said. “Our partners are definitely trying to think of ways to promote outreach, especially as we’re going at the tax filing season next year to think about how we can target families who are likelier to not file taxes or to not be aware of their eligibilit­y.”

Lawmakers have only approved the expanded credit through December, but Mr. Biden’s Build Back Better Act could extend the monthly payments through 2022 for parents who earn less than $75,000 a year if they’re single, or less than $150,000 if they’re married. The Act could also make permanent a provision that allows the lowest-income families to receive the full benefit, even if they don’t pay taxes.

Those researcher­s say that the program would reduce child poverty, at most, by 22%. Other researcher­s, including analysts at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, say the tax credit will reduce child poverty by 41%. A team of researcher­s from Columbia University determined that the first round of payments lifted 3 million children out of poverty.

As lawmakers continue to debate the program’s efficacy this week, Ms. Burnside said parents who use the monthly checks on food and rent need Congress to approve an extension.

“Those are all expenses that families are going to have to continue meeting beyond December, so it’s absolutely essential that lawmakers extend these payments into next year,” Ms. Burnside said. “Otherwise, these monthly payments will stop next month, and parents will be left without this money that they can rely on to meet those existing bills and cost of food.”

 ?? Lexi Browning/Washington Post ?? Ruth Jones and her husband, James Jones, of Charleston, W.Va., are raising their grandchild­ren Ayricah Clark, 10, and Nilique Jones, 17.
Lexi Browning/Washington Post Ruth Jones and her husband, James Jones, of Charleston, W.Va., are raising their grandchild­ren Ayricah Clark, 10, and Nilique Jones, 17.

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