The Wall Street Journal’s editors have written another great editorial, this time on the expansion of the child tax credit into an UBI [Universal Basic Income] for children. Parents can now claim a maximum of $3,000 for those ages 6 to 17 and up and $3,600 for children under age 6, up from its previous $2,000 level. The expanded part of the credit begins to decrease as income rises above $75,000 for individuals, $112,500 for heads of household, and $150,000 for married couples. The $2,000 credit starts phasing out when income reaches $200,000 for individuals and $400,000 for married couples.
The credit isn’t just bigger, it is also fully refundable, meaning that parents who don’t make enough money to pay the income tax will receive cash from the government in the full amount of the credit regardless of their income. There is also no work requirement attached to the benefit and the cash is distributed in monthly payments. These payments started in July and the Democrats want to expand them through 2025.
The WSJ rightly explains that this is a typical case of government programs starting small and getting bigger overtime.
Both parties deserve blame for expanding a program that shouldn’t even exist – a program that only adds further distortions of the tax code. And today, some Republicans, like Senator Mitt Romney of Utah, and other conservatives are pushing similar types of child UBI as the one described above.
Here are the kind of benefits we are talking about:
And in case the sentence “The $2,000 credit starts phasing out when income reaches $200,000 for individuals and $400,000 for married couples” didn’t give you an clue that this isn’t really an anti-poverty program, the WSJ explains:
For all the talk of getting people out of poverty, this policy will likely backfire. As shown by the work of Robert Doar, president of the American Enterprise Institute – and someone who, having run New York City’s welfare programs from 2007 to 2013, also happens to have a better understanding of this issue than most people who write about welfare – poverty isn’t just about money. Back in June, for instance, he wrote:
My decades of work in New York’s social services agencies make me skeptical [that these checks will reduce child poverty]. People weather all kinds of challenges and hardships, and nothing is as simple as it seems. Sending money is sometimes helpful, but it rarely addresses the underlying issues.
… This new, no-strings-attached cash from Washington, for example, will leave unaddressed the serious problems of substance abuse. By sending checks directly, the Biden administration will sever the contact between parents and social workers, which helps uncover signs of addiction.
Not every unmarried, nonworking mother who dropped out of high school has a substance-abuse problem. But many do.
Doar’s experience is confirmed by many scholarly works, including his own, as well as by that of his colleagues at AEI and in other places. Scott Winship, for instance, has a detailed paper on what the academic evidence says and doesn’t say about the ability of child allowances, à la Biden or à la Romney, on work and marriage incentives. As always, it’s complicated. But the bottom line is that these programs “run the risk of increasing the number of single-parent families in which no one is employed,” which “would potentially worsen entrenched poverty in the long run reversing gains the nation has made since the welfare reforms of the 1990s.”
It’s useful to remember that before the 1990s welfare reforms requiring welfare recipients to work or prepare for work, not only were nearly nine in 10 families on welfare were workless, unwed births rose significantly and most of these families were stuck in long-term poverty, thus fueling a trend of unending, intergenerational child poverty.
While money can help in the short run, the truth is that no country ever got out of poverty because of income redistribution (a point economist Thomas Sowell took great pains to demonstrate in his work). If such ‘redistribution’ could deliver such a happy outcome, the U.S. should have no child poverty at all. As Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation recently noted, “before the COVID-19 recession, the U.S. spent nearly $500 billion on means-tested cash, food, housing, and medical care for poor and low-income families with children. This is seven times the amount needed to eliminate all child poverty in the U.S., according to Census figures.”
This is in part due to the fact that most of these benefits aren’t counted as income in official government poverty reports. But the reality is that, to make a noticeable improvement on the poverty front, people need to improve their ability to earn and move up the income ladder.
One final note: While I may not want a return to the pre-1990s welfare policies, many Republicans and conservatives seem intent to rewind ever further back in time, pre-1980s, when their support for government intervention rendered them indistinguishable from the left. Sadly, they’ll soon find out this won’t put them ahead because the Democrats will use this as a way to ask for even more. The WSJ seems to agree:
READER COMMENTS
Floccina
Sep 27 2021 at 2:46pm
I agree that most of the problems correlated with poverty are not caused by poverty. I keep offering this story link up.
There are some who are poor due to bad help or very low skill, but many that I’ve known are poor due less sympathy arousing reasons.
Pemakin
Sep 27 2021 at 3:31pm
Reading this made me want to invest in illicit drugs. They are sure to rise from this demand shock.
Michael
Sep 27 2021 at 10:04pm
Once again, someone writes a piece criticizing the Child Tax Credit, makes a reference to the problems of pre 1990s welfare, and simply ignores the massive difference in implicit marginal rates between the two sceratikns. Even though the impact of marginal tax rates is a cornerstone of conservative and libertarian thinking about taxes and incentives.
It a pretty big tell.
Johnson85
Sep 28 2021 at 4:35pm
I would say that except to the extent it’s refundable, this isn’t a distortion as much as an appropriate adjustment to reflect the fact that parents are paying to raise the next generation of payers for our ponzi like entitlement programs. I wish instead of making it refundable, they would let it offset payroll taxes. Maybe let people recoup prior payroll taxes paid from the prior three years if they want it to be really generous to the working poor, without rewarding the poor who have not been contributing workers recently.
It’s really somewhat ridiculous that you get so much credit for working and paying payroll taxes and more or less zero credit for actually doing what’s necessary to ensure future payments are made.
Thomas Lee Hutcheson
Sep 28 2021 at 5:31pm
The case against is pretty sketchy. Since the CTC phases out at a pretty high level, is does not seem to have an anti-work incentive and how would it have any anti-marriage incentive? How much/little would work income have to fall for Ms Veronique to judge that the CTC had backfired and did not/did in fact reduce child poverty? Dollar for dollar would certainly be enough for most people to say it backfired but what if it were $o.10 on the dollar?
Lizard Man
Oct 4 2021 at 12:10am
Isn’t childhood poverty after taxes and transfers measured by the supplemental poverty measure? I am pretty sure that when you look at that, both childhood poverty and overall poverty in the US are much lower than the simple percentage of people living in poverty. Which suggests that redistribution does actually serve the purpose of reducing the number of people experiencing lack of necessary material goods like food or housing, which is different than raising the wages earned by a family, which is what the poverty rate measures.
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