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5 Million More Children Experienced Poverty in 2022 Than in 2021, Following Expiration of COVID-era Economic Relief - Child Trends [1]
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Date: 2024-06
1. Make it simple for families to access the benefits to which they are entitled.
Billions of dollars in benefits—yes, billions (spelled with a b!)—are left unclaimed each year because our systems have made them difficult for families to access and use. In the process of disbursing stimulus payments and implementing the expanded Child Tax Credit, we learned how to make benefits more accessible to families. But as the expanded CTC expired, important policy lessons learned about making benefits easier to access were left on the table, including the following:
Reaching families through systems they already interact with (e.g., the tax system) to effectively assess eligibility and disburse benefits
Providing multiple access points to reach families not already connected to existing systems (e.g., creating a nonfiler portal so that families who don’t need to file taxes can still access the credit)
Distributing payments monthly so families can receive support when they need it—and offering multiple options for disbursement (e.g., direct deposit, check, and preloaded debit card options)
2. Ensure that all children who need support are able to access it.
By the latest estimations, American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN), Black, and Hispanic families are more likely to experience poverty than their peers. In 2022, AIAN, Black, and Hispanic children were more than 2.5 times as likely to experience poverty as their White peers. Many of these children and their families are excluded from our country’s social safety net either through formal eligibility exclusions or through requirements or administrative burdens disproportionately experienced by families of color. But temporary pandemic-era policies showed us that we could not only significantly reduce levels of child poverty, but also reduce racial and ethnic disparities in economic well-being by removing restrictions that disproportionately exclude certain populations from social safety net programs. For example:
The Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) program expanded unemployment benefits to independent contractors and gig workers, groups that are disproportionately Black and Hispanic.
The expanded Child Tax Credit based eligibility on children’s citizenship status rather than that of their parents (as with the current CTC).
3. Support families’ abilities to work to provide for their families.
Work is an incredibly effective way to support a family—when a job can be found and maintained. Less than 4 percent of individuals who worked full-time, year-round were in poverty in 2022. But the pandemic made clear that workers must have the resources they need to balance work with family responsibilities. Access to affordable, dependable, high-quality child care and paid family and medical leave is critical for sustained employment—particularly for single parents. The American Rescue Plan provided critical support during the pandemic that allowed child care providers to keep their doors open and their parents to work. As we face the expiration of these funds, we need a permanent investment in child care that ensures that all families have access to affordable care and that child care workers are paid wages that allow them to support their own families.
4. Ensure that benefit levels are sufficient to meet eligible families’ needs during times of economic hardship.
The generosity of our social supports is directly related to the number of children these supports are able to lift out of poverty. In order to meet eligible families’ needs during times of national economic hardship, benefit levels must be closely pegged to inflation to keep up with higher costs of living. Coordination across safety net programs and combined application processes can not only improve administrative efficiency but also maximize the short- and long-term benefits for children and their families.
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[1] Url:
https://www.childtrends.org/publications/5-million-more-children-experienced-poverty-in-2022-than-in-2021-following-expiration-of-covid-era-economic-relief
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