000 01590nab a2200277 c 4500
999 _c147952
_d147952
003 ES-MaIEF
005 20230727111716.0
007 ta
008 230727t2023 us ||||| |||| 00| 0|eng d
040 _aES-MaIEF
_bspa
_cES-MaIEF
100 1 _966658
_aMichelmore, Katherine
245 4 _aThe 2021 child tax credit
_bwho received it and how did they spend it?
_c by Katherine Michelmore and Natasha V. Pilkauskas
504 _aBibliografía.
520 _aIn March of 2021, Congress passed a one-year expansion of the Child Tax Credit (CTC), creating a temporary, near-universal child benefit. Despite expanding eligibility to millions of previously ineligible children living in low-income households, only two-thirds received the monthly benefit. We illustrate that some historic gaps in receipt of the CTC remain despite the efforts to make the credit more universal: prior tax filing, household income, and survey language were among the strongest predictors of monthly receipt. More work is needed to understand why families did not receive the CTC and how to reach these vulnerable populations.
650 4 _aNIÑOS
_947835
650 4 _aIMPUESTOS
_947460
650 4 _aGASTOS FISCALES
_950212
650 4 _aPOBREZA
_948038
650 4 _aRENTA FAMILIAR
_948261
650 4 _aBIENESTAR SOCIAL
_933421
650 4 _aESTADOS UNIDOS
_942888
650 _aMODELOS ECONOMETRICOS
_947776
700 1 _970870
_aPilkauskas, Natasha V.
773 0 _9169901
_oOP 234/2023/5(Congreso an
_tThe American Economic Review
_w(IEF)103372
_x 0002-8282
_g v. 113, May 2023, p. 413-419
942 _cART