Showing posts with label EITC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EITC. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Congress to Balance Budget on the Backs of the Poor



Senate Budget Committee Chairman Mike Enzi’s new plan proposes to balance the budget in ten years through massive cuts in domestic programs, with no revenue contribution over that time. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities estimates that the Senate Budget plan and the House Budget Committee plan will get 69 percent of their cuts from programs that benefit low and moderate income people.

The Stated Clerk of the General Assembly, when discussing priorities in the federal budget, wrote “we know that we are responsible to each other and, as the Gospel of Luke teaches us, ‘from everyone to whom much has been given, much will be required.’  We, therefore, urge a solution to the…. federal deficit that ensures long-term fiscal stability; deficit reduction; just, new revenue; long-term integrity for entitlement programs; and a priority on the most vulnerable in society[1].”

The published budgets would slash essential funding and weaken the federal safety net at a time when many families have yet to fully recover from The Great Recession. Here is a closer look at what gets cut and what programs are safe:
  •      Health care for low- and moderate-income people. Each plan would repeal health reform, including its subsidies to make coverage affordable for people with low or moderate incomes and its Medicaid expansion, and block-grant much of Medicaid, while also making deep cuts to the program.  At least 14 million people would lose their Medicaid coverage or no longer gain coverage in the future[2].
  •      SNAP (formerly food stamps). The House plan block-grants SNAP starting in 2021 and cuts SNAP funds by $125 billion, or more than a third, over 2021 to 2025.  Cuts of this magnitude would end food assistance for millions of low-income families, cut benefits for millions of such households, or do some combination of the two.
  •      Tax credits for low- and modest-income working families. Each plan would let critical provisions of the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and the Child Tax Credit (CTC) expire at the end of 2017, which would push more than 16 million people, including almost 8 million children, into or deeper into poverty.
  •      Other mandatory (i.e. entitlement) programs serving low-income people. The House and Senate plans would each cut hundreds of billions of dollars from mandatory programs in the education and income security categories of the budget.  Although each plan lacks specifics, severe cuts of up to 90 billion dollars would occur to Pell Grants, which help students from families with modest incomes afford college.
  •      Low-income non-defense discretionary programs. The House and Senate plans each would make additional cuts on top of the significant reductions required by the Budget Control Act’s discretionary caps and sequestration.  These cuts would shrink the funds available for investments in education, research, and transportation, as well as for low-income programs such as housing assistance, Head Start, and the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program[3].
  •              Military Spending is Safe. The House and Senate would both stay within the budget caps for the Pentagon’s base budget ($523 billion) in 2016 but the House would significantly increase the war funding account to $90 billion, and would add $397 billion to the Pentagon accounts over the next 10 years[4].




[1] Gradye Parsons,  “Addressing the Moral Concern of Deficits through Principles, not Politics” http://www.pcusa.org/news/2012/12/11/addressing-moral-concern-deficits-through-principl/
[2] http://www.offthechartsblog.org/proposed-medicaid-block-grant-would-add-millions-to-uninsured-and-underinsured/
[3] http://www.offthechartsblog.org/house-senate-budget-plans-each-get-69-percent-of-cuts-from-low-income-programs/
[4] http://fcnl.org/blog/2c/battling_budgets/

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Oppose Budget Balanced on Backs of Poor People


Today the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives started debating their 2016 budget resolutions. Votes on these budgets will determine anti-hunger policy for the rest of this year and beyond.

If passed, the proposed budget cuts could lead to devastating increases in hunger and poverty in the U.S. and abroad. For example:

  • The House budget proposal drastically cuts SNAP (formerly the Food Stamp Program) by at least 34 percent, the equivalent of up to 220 missed meals annually for each SNAP participant.
  • Both budget plans would repeal the Affordable Care Act and block grant Medicaid, making deep cuts to health coverage for low-income people.
  • Lifesaving international programs would be cut by 16 percent in the House budget. Funding for our international humanitarian aid budget has already been cut by 22 percent – we can’t afford any further cuts.
  • Sixty-nine percent of the budget cuts in both the House and Senate come directly from programs impacting low-income people – placing the burden on those who are already suffering.
  • Both House and Senate budgets allow to expire critical tax relief for the poorest workers, through the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and Child Tax Credit (CTC), plunging 16 million people, including 8 million children, into deeper poverty.
  • Both budgets keep the automatics budget cuts of 2011 (called sequestration) in place – and cut even further. This puts programs like WIC, food aid, and poverty focused development assistance in grave danger.  

Raise your voice with thousands of faithful advocates. Call your Senators and Representative at (800) 826-3688 in the next 24 hours. Urge them to oppose cuts to programs that are working to end hunger and poverty in the U.S. and around the world.

For more information on proposed budget cuts to programs that serve the most vulnerable people, visit our blog.


* Many thanks to Bread for the World for use of their 800-number and permission to reprint an excerpt of their action alert.

Monday, July 22, 2013

Faith Community Urges Senators to Include Low-income Tax Credits in Tax Reform



July 22, 2013

United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510

Dear Senator:

Chairman Baucus and Ranking Member Hatch invited you to provide input on tax reform, particularly about tax expenditures. As people of faith from across religions, denominations, and backgrounds, we see the federal budget and our tax code as moral documents, outlining our priorities as a country. We urge you to write a letter and emphasize some of the most effective anti-poverty initiatives enacted: the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and the Child Tax Credit (CTC).

As groups dedicated to addressing poverty and hunger, we were pleased to see the letter from Chairman Baucus and Ranking Member Hatch. As we read it, this letter calls for a “blank slate” approach in regards to tax credits, while protecting the EITC and CTC at their current levels, with the 2009 improvements. We in the faith community would like to affirm this decision and would hope that in the coming conversations about tax reform this is not lost. The EITC and the CTC keep many out of poverty and are examples of our faithful principles in practice.

Please write Chairman Baucus and Ranking Member Hatch and tell them that you support and agree that tax reform must ensure the EITC and CTC are continued at their current levels with the 2009 improvements.

We know there are many voices clamoring around tax reform. However, those struggling with hunger and in poverty are often left out of the tax policy debates. We urge you to remember them as you make important decisions over generating and allocating federal resources.

Second, it is important that tax reform generate adequate new revenue so we can continue this country’s commitment to addressing poverty while contributing to a healthy economy and fiscal future. As people of faith, we can envision a world without hunger and poverty. But that vision is untenable if sequestration remains in place, if our long-term deficits grow too big, if we fail to invest in effective anti-poverty measures, and if our economy remains weak. We urge you to emphasize this point as well.

In Proverbs (31.9) we are reminded of our responsibility to “Speak up, judge righteously, champion the poor and the needy.” We urge you to follow these words as you provide input on tax reform. These tax decisions will reflect more than our government’s revenue situation, they will reflect our values as a nation.

Sincerely,


Bread for the World
Friends Committee on National Legislation
Jewish Council for Public Affairs
Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office
The National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd
National Council of Jewish Women
NETWORK
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Sisters of Mercy of the Americas, Institute Justice Team
Union for Reform Judaism
United Church of Christ Justice and Witness Ministries
The United Methodist Church General Board of Church and Society