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| Washington News and Views
Refundable Child Tax Credit Passes Congress Back to Table of Contents |
The otherwise thoroughly regressive tax legislation passed by Congress May 28th includes a significant silver lining a partially refundable child credit for low-income families. For three months, grassroots members of the National Campaign for Jobs and Income Support, a special project of the Center for Community Change, along with the Childrens Defense Fund, the US Catholic Conference, the Food Research and Action Center, NOW-LDEF, and the National Council of La Raza, have been working hard for this change.
The final tax bill includes a version of the Campaigns proposal that will make the credit refundable for families earning more than $10,000 per year, meaning that many low-income families with children will get a refund check back from the IRS, even if they dont owe any taxes. The program costs about $8 billion per year, and amounts to the largest anti-poverty program created since the early 1990s expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit. The provision helps about 17 million children who would have received nothing under the Presidents proposal and will lift 500,000 children above the poverty line. The refundable child credit adopted by Congress: Is partially refundable for families with earnings over $10,000 per year (indexed to inflation beginning in 2002). A family with one child earning $17,000 or more would get the maximum $1,000. Will not be considered income for purposes of determining eligibility under any federal or state benefits program. Becomes effective in calendar year 2001 (so eligible families may claim a refund when they file 2001 taxes next year). Contact: Ruth Cohen, National Campaign for Jobs and Income Support, 202-342-0567 or cohenr@commchange.org. Copyright 2001 |
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