Wednesday, February 9, 2022

What a great idea: Creating a state-level child tax credit

 Connecticut Voices For Children

Complete report :"The Case For The Connecticut Child Tax Credit." http://ow.ly/2io050HPuZo

As addressed a recent tax report—“Steps To A Fairer Tax System”—half of Connecticut’s families in 2021 had difficulty paying their usual expenses (e.g., food, housing, utilities).1 The problem has continued in 2022 and appears to be getting worse. In January, 53 percent of the state’s families had difficulty paying their usual expenses, and the percentage was even higher for certain subgroups, especially working-class and lower-middle-class families (78 percent and 62 percent), Black and Latino/a/x families (77 percent and 74 percent), and families with children (65 percent).

Income inequality and the racial income gap make it difficult for working- and middle-class families, especially families of color, to make ends meet; and over time, through both the “investment” and “stress” pathways, income inequality and the racial income gap negatively impact the children from working- and middle-class families, especially families of color, in “virtually every dimension, from physical and mental health, to educational attainment and labor market success, to risky behaviors and delinquency.”

These problems in turn weaken Connecticut’s economy and thereby decrease the state’s ability to make critical investments and pay down long-term obligations, which ultimately hurts all of the state’s families. 

The recent report cited above showed that Connecticut’s approach to taxation contributes to the above problems. The report also showed that making Connecticut’s tax system fairer requires tax reform, transparency, and timely support, all of which, in simple terms, would put more money in the pockets of working and middle-class families, especially families of color.

This companion report provides a detailed overview of one especially problematic component of the tax system: Connecticut is the only high cost of living state in the U.S. with an income tax that does not adjust for family size or child care expenses, which makes the state’s unfair tax system even more unfair for working- and middle-class families with children, especially those that require child care. 

In addition to making it harder for families with children to make ends meet compared to the average family, the lack of tax support for the high and growing cost of raising children directly contributes to the state’s slow economic growth by slowing the state’s population growth, which is a function of both a declining natural rate of population change (i.e., the birth rate minus the death rate) and a negative net migration rate (i.e., the number of families moving to the state minus the number of families leaving).

Property tax reform urgently needed in Connecticut

 Connecticut has a rare opportunity, due to its positive budget situation, to correct the greatest inadequacy and inequity in its tax structure: the longstanding over-reliance on the local property tax. Property tax reform should be focused on correcting the serious flaws associated with this tax; which now constitutes the major source of funding for municipalities, and makes up 41.9% of the total tax burden for Connecticut residents. 

There are two fundamental flaws in Connecticut’s property tax system. (1) Horizontal inequity: owners of property with similar values are taxed at different rates depending on which town they live in, and owners paying similar tax rates receive widely different services. (2) Vertical inequity: low- and moderate-income households are subjected to far higher effective property tax rates than high-income households. 

Property tax reform must be done in a way that corrects these structural flaws. If we fail to correct both the vertical and horizontal inequities, we will continue down a path of widely disparate educational opportunity, fractured and inefficient delivery of needed services, hollowed out cities, widening racial and economic disparities, sprawling suburbs, fleeing businesses and an out-migration of the next generation of talent. 

Complete report

Monday, February 7, 2022

Midterms optimism and “When are we going to start hitting Republicans?"

 KRISTIAN RAMOS of Autonomy Strategies said he’s “more optimistic than others.” He said the “economy is incredible” and Democrats will have a better story to tell about the Biden record this year if they pass some version of Build Back Better, get children under 5 vaccinated, confirm the first Black woman to the Supreme Court and highlight the implementation of the infrastructure law.

But he’s bewildered by what he sees as his party’s restraint when it comes to attacking the GOP. “When are we going to start hitting Republicans?” he asked. “When are we going to start pointing out these people are fascist light and don’t believe in democracy?”

Friday, February 4, 2022

The Republican Party declared the deadly January 6th Capitol attack “legitimate political discourse.”

 

Today, the Republican Party formally passed a resolution declaring the deadly January 6th Capitol attack “legitimate political discourse.” The Party also censured Reps. Adam Kinzinger and Liz Cheney, the two Republicans serving on the January 6th committee investigating the riot. RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel doubled down on the resolution in a statement, claiming Kinzinger and Cheney are engaging in a “persecution of ordinary citizens who engaged in legitimate political discourse.”
Yes: according to the Republican Party, sending lawmakers running for their lives and chanting about hanging the Vice President is simply “legitimate political discourse.” Trump is running in 2024. State Republicans are suppressing the vote and gerrymandering their way back into power. The entire party is beholden to the Big Lie. Make no mistake: the GOP is dragging us into outright fascism. Democrats must take this threat seriously — before it’s too late.

As the RNC reframes the unlawful attempt to overturn the election of President Biden as “legitimate,” we again call for the CT GOP, Bob Stefanowski, and all other CT Republican candidates to condemn Trump’s incitement of the riot.