Critical Policy Gaps in the Earned Income Tax Credit: A Lost Opportunity for Improving Equity and Reducing Youth Violence and Child Abuse and Neglect
Ut Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas TX
Investigators
Abstract
Project Abstract/Summary: The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) plays a critical part in the social safety net by increasing ï¬nancial security for low to moderate income working families, particularly the 5.4 million households headed by single female parents with low education. The EITC has been identiï¬ed as a promising primary prevention strategy for preventing child injury and risk factors for youth violence. However, program design fails vulnerable ï¬rst-time mothers. EITC payments are so limited for ï¬rst-time mothers that researchers have used less educated, single ï¬rst-time mothers as the âcontrolâ group to establish the positive impacts of the EITC. Our central hypothesis is that current EITC design contributes to higher child abuse and neglect and youth violence and exacerbates health inequities for groups already experiencing disproportionate burdens of violence. The EITC gap exists as women pregnant with their ï¬rst child receive little to no EITC beneï¬t until 2-14 months following birth despite strong evidence that stress, nutrition, and economic well-being during pregnancy and early infancy impact a lifetime of outcomes including experiences with violence. Our long-term goal is to support the health and well- being of families by equitably reducing experiences with violence. The overall objective of this application is to estimate how EITC policy design impacts outcomes for ï¬rst children and how this contributes to the disproportionate burden of violence. We update the existing literature on EITC eï¬ects with a combination of data sources and causal design and provide the ï¬rst estimates of the child abuse and neglect and youth violence improvements possible by closing the EITC gap for ï¬rst-time mothers. Speciï¬c Aim 1: To quantify child abuse and neglect and youth violence eï¬ects that would be achieved by closing the EITC gap for ï¬rst births. Speciï¬c Aim 2: To understand community member perspectives on risk factors for child abuse and neglect and youth violence including EITC eligibility. Speciï¬c Aim 3: To estimate a simulation model of the costs and beneï¬ts of closing the EITC coverage gaps for ï¬rst-time mothers. 3.1: Assess the CAN and youth violence eï¬ects of closing the EITC gap at the federal level. 3.2: Separately estimate impacts of the EITC gap for people disproportionately impacted by violence based on disability status and race and ethnicity and assess the role of the EITC gap in perpetuating disproportionate burdens of violence.
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