Skip to main content

All Research

Filter by Issue Area

Filter by Type

Blog Post

Refocusing the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation on Achieving Deep Cost Reductions

…should make maximum use of a powerful existing tool—the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, or CMMI—to cut health entitlement expenditures. In 1980, combined federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid was…

Blog Post

SNAP Prioritizes Nutrition in New Administration

…with no other income can receive a maximum benefit of $975 per month. Currently, participants can purchase any food or beverage for home consumption using SNAP benefits, with the exception of alcohol,…

Blog Post

Common-Sense SNAP Reforms Included in House Agriculture Reconciliation Proposal

…increasing benefit levels for inflation. The Thrifty Food Plan sets maximum SNAP benefit levels, intending to represent the cost of a “nutritious, practical, cost-effective diet” for home consumption. President Biden’s…

Blog Post

The Family First Act Would Expand Net Income Tax Refunds to Higher Income Families

…Tax Credit to $4,200 for children aged to 5 and $3,000 for children aged 6 to 17, compared to the current $2,000 maximum for all eligible children. It would also…

Blog Post

Pro-Marriage Conservatives Should Reject a Per-Child Phase-In of the Child Tax Credit

…Credit in four ways. First, they would increase the maximum Child Tax Credit from $2,000 to $3,000, a costly increase. A better idea would be to immediately increase the maximum…

Blog Post

The Child Tax Credit: My Long-Read Q&A with Kevin Corinth

…as “middle class tax relief.” That’s not really what it was. It was in the sense that it increased that maximum payment, but you’re right, the fundamental change was that…

Blog

Child Tax Credit Bill Would Increase Marriage Penalties for Working Single Mothers

…apply the proposed $1,800 maximum refundable CTC. The per-child refundable CTC is 45 percent of earned income above $2,500 before phasing out as the non-refundable CTC phases in. We apply…

Blog Post

Per-Child Benefit in Wyden-Smith Child Tax Credit Bill Would Discourage Full-Time Work for Families with Multiple Children

…amount as the maximum non-refundable CTC. Second, it would begin indexing the maximum non-refundable CTC with inflation. Third, it would apply a one-year lookback for qualifying for the refundable portion…

Blog Post

Lawmakers Continue Trying to Revive Pandemic-Style Benefits

…unemployed. Except during the Great Recession and the pandemic, states have always contributed 50 percent to EB costs. The proposal would increase EB benefits from a current maximum of 20…

Blog Post

Labor Department Report Finds Pandemic Unemployment Program Had a Staggering 36 Percent Improper Payment Rate

On August 21, the US Department of Labor (DOL) released its long-awaited “improper payment report” on the troubled Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) program. PUA was an unprecedented federal unemployment benefit program that…

Blog Post

The CTC Work Incentive Works

…returned to its pre-pandemic form, phasing-in at 15 percent of earnings beyond $2,500, up to a maximum of $1,600 in a refundable CTC per child and a non-refundable $2,000 per…

Blog Post

How ‘Negativity Bias’ Skews the Conversation About Artificial Intelligence

…many people are likely to experience significant AI-driven disruptions in their jobs and lives. Instead of trying to stop this inevitable transition, we should focus on how to maximize the…