EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT A Boost for Working Virginia Families. The Commonwealth Institute

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EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT A Boost for Working Virginia Families The Commonwealth Institute December 2018

Overview 1 Section I About the Earned Income Tax Credit 3 Section II Improving Virginia s EITC 11

The EITC has seen bipartisan support since its creation in 1975 The EITC helps make work pay, and it could do more. The Earned Income Tax Credit helps working families keep more of what they earn. The federal EITC was started in 1975 and has enjoyed bipartisan support ever since. It lifts 5.8 million people, including 3 million children, out of poverty each year by providing a tax credit based on income and family size that gets applied to a family s tax bill. Anything left over after the credit gets refunded to them, just like any other tax refund. 1 OVERVIEW

Virginia s EITC and How It Can Be Improved The good news: Virginia has a state version of the EITC for certain tax filers. It was created as part of the 2004 tax reform package, and is set at 20 percent of the federal EITC. The bad news: it isn t refundable so the state does not give all families the full value of their credit. Making the state EITC refundable, as it is in 23 other states and the District of Columbia, would return about $250 million each year to the pockets of hard-working Virginians and spread that money throughout the local economy. Missing Out on the Full Value of the EITC This book explains how the EITC works, who it works for, and how lawmakers can improve it. 2 OVERVIEW

SECTION I ABOUT THE EITC

The EITC is an Effective, Targeted Economic Boost The EITC supports Virginia s working families. A family must be earning income to be eligible for the EITC. And for families earning low wages and struggling to make ends meet, the EITC is an economic boost. 4 SECTION I: About the EITC

The EITC Lifts Many Families Above the Poverty Line 200,000 Virginians, including 100,000 children, were lifted out of poverty each year from 2011 to 2013 because of the federal EITC, together with the Child Tax Credit The EITC is one of the most effective anti-poverty tools. Part of what makes the federal EITC effective is that it s refundable meaning that if the earned credit is larger than the income tax owed, the remainder of the credit is refunded. This helps families to be able to better afford things like child care and reliable transportation to work. 5 SECTION I: About the EITC

The EITC is a Well-Designed Tax Credit The tapered design of the EITC ensures that a family is rewarded for work and does not suddenly lose the boost the credit provides just for earning a little bit more. 6 SECTION I: About the EITC

The EITC is a Boost to Families Across the Commonwealth The EITC benefits families in every city and county in Virginia, with the biggest boost going to struggling communities. 7 SECTION I: About the EITC

Boosting Economic Security Research shows that families receiving federal EITC refunds use those dollars to help make ends meet often paying for basic necessities such as food, utility bills, and car and home repair. Source: TCI analysis of The Role of Earned Income Tax Credits in the Budgets of Low-Income Families, Social Services Review, September 2012. EITC refunds put money in the pockets of many hard-working Virginians and into local economies. One survey found that nearly one third of EITC refund dollars were spent on current consumption such as groceries, child expenses, household needs like refrigerators and washing machines, and other everyday needs. Just over one quarter was initially saved or spent on larger needs like car or home purchase or repair, or education expenses. Just over forty percent of refund dollars were spent on bills or helping a family get out of medical, student loan, and other debt. 8 SECTION I: About the EITC

The EITC Has Long-Term Benefits The EITC is more than an economic boost. It is a long-term investment in health, education, and more. 9 SECTION I: About the EITC

The EITC is a Hand Up for Many Families The EITC is a work support and can boost the ability of individuals to move up in their careers. Research shows that when people have taken advantage of the federal EITC and state EITC supplements in the past, they often can t claim the credits within two years because their earnings increase too much! 10 SECTION I: About the EITC

SECTION II IMPROVING VIRGINIA S EITC

Twenty-nine States and DC Have Enacted EITCs, as of 2017 Of states that have enacted an EITC, Virginia is just one of a few that do not give the full value of the credit to all families who have earned it. 12 SECTION II: Improving Virginia s EITC

Virginia EITC Helps the Federal Credit Go Further Virginia s state EITC equal to 20 percent of the federal credit piggy-backs on the federal EITC and helps offset state and local taxes such as sales and property taxes. Right now, the federal refundable EITC helps a broad range of people. Virginia s corresponding credit, however, is more limited. 13 SECTION II: Improving Virginia s EITC

The Virginia EITC Could Do More for Families Source: TCI calculations based on EITC parameters for tax year 2018. Note: Does not account for Spouse Tax Adjustment therefore may underestimate benefits of refundability. Working families who will benefit from a refundable credit will receive a few hundred dollars on average. What may seem like a small amount can be the difference between having the funds to fix a car to get to work or losing a job. 14 SECTION II: Improving Virginia s EITC

A Refundable State EITC Helps Offset State and Local Taxes If Virginia s EITC were refundable, it could boost the benefits of work for families with children and help offset other state and local taxes, like sales and gas taxes, that we know working families pay. 15 SECTION II: Improving Virginia s EITC

A Refundable EITC Benefits a Range of Working Families 16 SECTION II: Improving Virginia s EITC

EITC Provides a Boost to Veterans and Military Families 55,300 veteran and military families in Virginia could benefi t from a refundable EITC Source: CBPP analysis of IRS data on the total number of EITC filers in tax year 2015, and CBPP analysis of American Community Survey 2014-2016 data to determine the share of such tax filers in each state that were military families. Numbers are rounded to the nearest 100. 17 SECTION II: Improving Virginia s EITC

EITC is a Boost to Women and Their Families 410,000 000 hard-working women in Virginia earn the federal EITC. 64 % of households who receive the federal EITC include a woman who works. Many of these women would be boosted by a refundable state credit. The EITC helps families afford the necessities like child care, and these credits are a critical tool to boost women s long-term economic prospects. 18 SECTION II: Improving Virginia s EITC

The EITC is a Boost to Rural Areas, Small Towns Families with low incomes spend more of what they earn on the basics, and they spend it locally. If the EITC was refundable, even more EITC dollars would be going into businesses in small and rural communities. 19 SECTION II: Improving Virginia s EITC

Almost Half of Virginia Families Who Receive the Federal EITC are Families of Color Many of these families would benefit from making Virginia s EITC refundable allowing these families to keep more of what they earned. Families of Color 46.3% Source: Urban Institute s Analysis of Taxes, Transfer, and Income Security Model (ATTIS), using data from the 2015 American Community Survey 20 SECTION II: Improving Virginia s EITC

The Commonwealth Institute The Commonwealth Institute for Fiscal Analysis provides credible, independent, and accessible information and analyses of state public policies with particular attention to the impacts on low- and moderate-income persons. Our products inform state economic, fi scal, and budget policy debates and contribute to sound decisions that improve the well-being of individuals, communities and Virginia as a whole. For more information, contact: Kenneth Gilliam, Jr. Policy Associate The Commonwealth Institute for Fiscal Analysis kenneth@thecommonwealthinstitute.org 804-396-2051 x108 Chris Wodicka Policy Analyst The Commonwealth Institute for Fiscal Analysis wodicka@thecommonwealthinstitute.org 804-396-2051 x104 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.

The Commonwealth Institute