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Child tax credit
                                                                                                    
Poverty is defined as not having enough material possessions or income to cover a person’s basic personal needs, often to the degree where one lacks food, clothing and shelter. The official U.S. child poverty rate in 2024 was 14.3%, a decrease from 15.3% in 2023, representing about 10.35 million children. Our child poverty rate is nearly one-and-a-half times higher than that for adults ages 18-64 (11%) and nearly twice as high than that for adults 65 and older (10%). In 2024, child poverty rates by race varied significantly with American Indian/Alaska Native children having the highest rate 25.7%, followed by Black children at 22.7% and Hispanic children at 21.5%. The rate was lowest for non-Hispanic white children at 6.7% and Asian children at 9.6%. These children are more likely to have poor academic achievement, drop out of high school and later become unemployed, experience economic hardship, and be involved in the criminal justice system. Children who experience poverty are also more likely to be poor at age 30 than children who were never poor. Lost productivity, worsened health, and increased crime stemming from child poverty cost the nation about $700 billion dollars a year, or about 3.5% of GDP.
Child tax credits reduce a taxpayer's liability on a dollar-for-dollar basis and are intended to provide an extra measure of tax relief for taxpayers with qualifying dependents. This credit, currently $2,200, is given to impoverished American taxpayers for each dependent child who is under the age of 17. If the credit exceeds taxes owed, families may receive up to $1,400 per child as a refund. Other dependents —including children ages 17–18 and full-time college students ages 19–24— can receive a nonrefundable credit of up to $500 each. Similar allowances exist in almost every country in the European Union, as well as in Canada and Australia. It is estimated that a modest increase in this tax credit could reduce childhood poverty to 9.% and reduce deep poverty — the share of kids living on half the poverty line or less — could be cut nearly in half, to 2.4%. This is exactly what the passage of the COVID-19 stimulus bill, the American Rescue Plan, accomplished before expiring.
Proposed Legislation: Reintroduction of H.R.3899 - American Family Act (118th Congress 2023-2024)
Prospective Sponsor: Rep. Rosa DeLauro (CT)
Child tax credits reduce a taxpayer's liability on a dollar-for-dollar basis and are intended to provide an extra measure of tax relief for taxpayers with qualifying dependents. This credit, currently $2,200, is given to impoverished American taxpayers for each dependent child who is under the age of 17. If the credit exceeds taxes owed, families may receive up to $1,400 per child as a refund. Other dependents —including children ages 17–18 and full-time college students ages 19–24— can receive a nonrefundable credit of up to $500 each. Similar allowances exist in almost every country in the European Union, as well as in Canada and Australia. It is estimated that a modest increase in this tax credit could reduce childhood poverty to 9.% and reduce deep poverty — the share of kids living on half the poverty line or less — could be cut nearly in half, to 2.4%. This is exactly what the passage of the COVID-19 stimulus bill, the American Rescue Plan, accomplished before expiring.
Proposed Legislation: Reintroduction of H.R.3899 - American Family Act (118th Congress 2023-2024)
Prospective Sponsor: Rep. Rosa DeLauro (CT)
Suggestion
                    
                            Poll Opening Date
        November 3, 2025
    Poll Closing Date
        November 9, 2025