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Research by Author & Topic
Data Appendix to Federal Expenditures on Infants and Toddlers in 2007 (Research Report)| Adam Kent, Tracy Vericker, Paul Johnson, Julia Isaacs, Jennifer Ehrle Macomber, Gillian Reynolds, Elizabeth Bell, Rebecca L. Clark, Rosalind Berkowitz King, Christopher Spiro, C. Eugene Steuerle, Adam Carasso |
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Federal Expenditures on Infants and Toddlers in 2007 looks comprehensively at federal spending and tax expenditures targeted toward infants and toddlers. This appendix details our data sources, the programs we include, and the methodology used to estimate the percentage of federal expenditures that went to infants and toddlers in 2007. | Posted to Web: June 03, 2009 | Publication Date: May 26, 2009 | Kids' Share 2008: How Children Fare in the Federal Budget (Research Report)Kids' Share 2008, a second annual report, looks comprehensively at trends in federal spending and tax expenditures on children. Key findings suggest that historically children have not been a budget priority. In 2007, this trend continued, as children's spending did not keep pace with GDP growth. Absent a policy change, children's spending will continue to be squeezed in the next decade. | Posted to Web: June 24, 2008 | Publication Date: June 23, 2008 | Kids' Share 2008: Key Facts (Fact Sheet / Data at a Glance)Key Facts: Kids' Share 2008 summarizes findings from the Kids' Share 2008 report, which looks comprehensively at trends in federal spending and tax expenditures on children. Key findings suggest that historically children have not been a budget priority. In 2007, this trend continued, as children's spending did not keep pace with GDP growth. Absent a policy change, children's spending will continue to be squeezed in the next decade. | Posted to Web: June 24, 2008 | Publication Date: June 23, 2008 | Children's Savings Accounts: Why Design Matters (Reports/Opportunity and Ownership Project)One way to achieve an ownership society is to endow all children with savings accounts starting at birth. This report shows that specific design features of a children's savings account program will impact the distribution of wealth. For example, non-taxability of account earnings distributes significantly more benefits to higher-income groups than to lower-income groups. Also, because many families experience mobility over their lifetimes, a significant portion of benefits conditioned on low annual income will accrue to middle- and higher-income families. Regardless, these accounts could be important in getting children banked and teaching them the value of saving and compound interest. | Posted to Web: May 23, 2008 | Publication Date: May 22, 2008 | Portraits of the Assets and Liabilities of Low-Income Families (Policy Briefs/Opportunity and Ownership Project)Nearly one quarter of low-income families do not have a checking or savings account, more than one-third do not own cars, 60 percent do not own a home, and 90 percent have no retirement account. In contrast, the typical middle-income family has checking or savings accounts, retirement accounts, owns a car and a home. This brief synthesizes current research on the assets and liabilities of low-income families into a variety of portraits and provides suggestions for future research and policy. | Posted to Web: May 23, 2008 | Publication Date: May 07, 2008 | How Much Does the Federal Government Spend to Promote Economic Mobility and for Whom? (Research Report)This report tallies all federal spending and tax subsidies aimed at promoting the economic mobility of Americans for 1980, 2006, and 2012. This first effort at defining a mobility budget--$746 billion in 2006--reaches two major conclusions: (1) poor and lower-income households owe little or no tax and so are excluded from the bulk of economic mobility programs, which are often delivered in the form of tax subsidies; and (2) while these households do benefit from many other federal programs, those programs generally are not aimed at promoting mobility--and sometimes even discourage it. Furthermore, under current law, mobility enhancing programs targeted to toward lower income households would decline as a share of GDP from 2006 to 2012, while those targeted to the better off would increase over the same period. | Posted to Web: February 04, 2008 | Publication Date: January 31, 2008 | Data Appendix to Investing in Children (Research Report)"Investing in Children" tracks trends in federal investment from 1965 to 2017 for children as compared against the nation as a whole. This appendix details our data sources, the programs we include, and the methodology used to estimate the percentage of all expenditures that went to children. | Posted to Web: September 07, 2007 | Publication Date: September 07, 2007 | Investing in Children (Policy Briefs)This brief charts U.S. federal spending on investment in total and for children from 1965 to 2017. Relative to GDP or domestic spending, total investment and investment in children—under almost any definition—fell over the 1965–2006 period, though with some recent rebounds. More important, projections of current policies show that overall government investment and especially investment in children are threatened to decline in relative and sometimes absolute importance, squeezed out mainly by faster, automatically growing programs that tend to favor consumption. These data raise the question of what relative priority the government should place on investment, and particularly investment in children. | Posted to Web: September 07, 2007 | Publication Date: September 07, 2007 | Investing in Children (Research Report)We chart U.S. federal spending on investment in total and for children from 1965 to 2017. Five major categories can be considered -- some more so than others -- to be investment or to have investment components: education and research, work supports, social supports, physical capital, and defense investment. Relative to domestic spending, the most direct investment -- education and research -- for the nation as a whole, and crucially for children, fell over the 1970-2006 period though with some recent rebounds. More important, projections of current policies show that overall government investment and especially investment in children are threatened to decline in relative and sometimes absolute importance, squeezed out mainly by faster, automatically growing programs that tend to favor consumption. These data raise the question of what relative priority the government should place on investment, and particularly investment in children. | Posted to Web: September 07, 2007 | Publication Date: September 07, 2007 | Kids' Share 2007 Presentation (Presentation)This PowerPoint presentation accompanies the report "Kids' Share 2007: How Children Fare in the Federal Budget." It was presented at a briefing of the Hill staff on March 15, 2007 entitled, "Priority or Afterthought? Children and the Federal Budget." Download the PowerPoint presentation. | Posted to Web: March 22, 2007 | Publication Date: March 16, 2007 |
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