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Publications by Laura Wheaton on Taxes and Social Programs

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Extending the EITC to Noncustodial Parents: Potential Impacts and Design Considerations (Occasional Paper)
Laura Wheaton, Elaine Sorensen

This paper examines the noncustodial parent earned income tax credit (NCP EITC), a new type of credit recently enacted in New York and Washington, D.C. and proposed by Senator Bayh and then-Senator Obama in 2007. The NCP EITC offers an earned income tax credit to low-income noncustodial parents who work and pay their full child support. This paper describes the rationale for this policy and provides national estimates of the benefits and costs of an NCP EITC under three alternative policy scenarios. It also discusses several key design and implementation issues.

Posted to Web: June 12, 2009Publication Date: May 23, 2009

Eligibility for Child Tax Credit by Age of Child (Research Report)
Leonard E. Burman, Laura Wheaton

The child tax credit (CTC) is a $1,000 partially refundable federal income tax credit for each qualifying child under age 17. In 2007, tax filers may claim a refundable credit (over and above any tax liability) equal to 15 percent of the excess of earnings over $11,750, up to the $1,000 maximum per child. The earnings threshold means that families with very low incomes get no benefit from the credit, and others will receive only a partial credit. This brief analysis shows that many families with young children tend have lower incomes and are thus left out. In 2007, 30 percent of qualifying children under age 2 in working families had family incomes too low to benefit from the full credit, compared with 27 percent of children overall and 24 percent of children 10 and older.

Posted to Web: May 22, 2007Publication Date: May 22, 2007

Estimating the Anti-Poverty Effects of Changes in Taxes and Benefits with TRIM3 (Research Report)
Linda Giannarelli, Laura Wheaton, Joyce Morton

This report presents an analysis of policies recommended by the Center for American Progress Task Force on Poverty. The analysis uses the TRIM3 microsimulation model. The policies include increasing the minimum wage, expanding the EITC and other tax credits, expanding the child care subsidy system, increasing participation in the Food Stamp Program, rescinding restrictions on legal aliens' eligibility for benefits, and increasing the number of housing vouchers. The analysis focuses on the policies' impacts on poverty, using a broad definition of income—after taxes and child care expenses and including the value of food and housing aid.

Posted to Web: April 25, 2007Publication Date: April 25, 2007

Who Gets the Child Tax Credit? (Research Report)
Leonard E. Burman, Laura Wheaton

In 1997, Congress created a $500 per child tax credit (CTC). It has since been increased to $1,000 and made available to some lower-income families with children, even if they had no tax liability. Still, many low-income families (as well as some with high incomes) receive less than $1,000 per child in tax benefits. Moreover, because of differences in income, family composition, and employment status, nearly half of Blacks and 46 percent of Hispanics receive no or reduced benefits from the CTC because their incomes are too low. By comparison, only 18 percent of White children are in that category.

Posted to Web: October 03, 2005Publication Date: October 03, 2005

Tax Subsidies for Private Health Insurance (Research Report)
Leonard E. Burman, Cori E. Uccello, Laura Wheaton, Deborah Kobes, Claudia Williams

Policymakers are considering a variety of new tax credit proposals to expand health insurance coverage. Understanding how current tax subsidies work and their role in supporting employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) is important when designing such policies. This brief presents essential information about the structure and distribution of existing tax subsidies for ESI and the implications for new policy options.

Posted to Web: May 01, 2003Publication Date: May 01, 2003

 
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