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Exposure to the Earned Income Tax Credit in Early Childhood and Family Wealth

Using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and a cohort of individuals born between 2000 and 2011, we examine whether exposure to the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) in early childhood (birth to age five) affects family wealth in middle childhood (ages six through eleven). Results suggest that a $1,00...

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Published in:RSF : Russell Sage Foundation journal of the social sciences 2021-08, Vol.7 (3), p.196-215
Main Authors: Michelmore, Katherine, Lopoo, Leonard M.
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description Using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and a cohort of individuals born between 2000 and 2011, we examine whether exposure to the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) in early childhood (birth to age five) affects family wealth in middle childhood (ages six through eleven). Results suggest that a $1,000 increase in EITC exposure in early childhood increases overall family wealth in middle childhood by around 4 percent. We also observe an increase in credit card debt (3 to 4 percent) and evidence that the EITC increases low-income families’ position in the wealth distribution. Effects are concentrated among white families; we find little evidence of a significant effect of the EITC on the wealth held by black families. Together, these results imply that although the EITC does appear to increase family wealth in childhood, it may not do much to reduce the substantial wealth gap between black and white families.
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subjects Childhood
Children & youth
Credit cards
Earned income tax credit
Earnings
Educational attainment
Families & family life
Households
Income distribution
Income taxes
Inequality
Labor supply
Low income groups
Part III. Policies That Address Wealth Inequality for Children
Poverty
Taxation
wealth
Wealth distribution
title Exposure to the Earned Income Tax Credit in Early Childhood and Family Wealth
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