Stimulus brings 6 million out of poverty: CBPP

The Cen­ter on Bud­get and Pol­icy Pri­or­i­ties has released a new study that exam­ines the impact that the Amer­i­can Recov­ery and Rein­vest­ment Act has had on poor peo­ple in Amer­ica.

The report from the CBPP claims that the eco­nomic stim­u­lus has kept 6 mil­lion Amer­i­cans out of poverty, and has reduced the sever­ity of poverty for 33 mil­lion more. The results are pro­jec­tions made by the think tank, and they say they are con­ser­v­a­tive projections.

From the CBPP, we take this sum­mary of the results for our snip­pet. The cen­ter also pro­vides a state by state table of results.

While the reces­sion is expected to drive states’ poverty rates up for 2009, new analy­sis based on Cen­sus data shows that the Amer­i­can Recov­ery and Rein­vest­ment Act of 2009 (ARRA) is keep­ing large num­bers of Amer­i­cans out of poverty in states across the coun­try. In addi­tion to boost­ing eco­nomic activ­ity and pre­serv­ing or cre­at­ing jobs, the recov­ery act is soft­en­ing the recession’s impact on poverty by directly lift­ing fam­ily incomes.

The Center’s analy­sis, which cov­ers 36 states and the Dis­trict of Colum­bia, exam­ines the effect on poverty of seven ARRA pro­vi­sions: the expan­sion of three tax cred­its for work­ing fam­i­lies, two pro­vi­sions that strengthen unem­ploy­ment insur­ance assis­tance, a pro­vi­sion that boosts food stamp ben­e­fits, and a one-time pay­ment for retirees, vet­er­ans, and peo­ple with disabilities.[1] Nation­ally, these pro­vi­sions are keep­ing more than 6 mil­lion Amer­i­cans out of poverty and reduc­ing the sever­ity of poverty for 33 mil­lion more. (These fig­ures include both peo­ple whom ARRA has lifted out of poverty and peo­ple whom ARRA has kept from falling into poverty.)

These esti­mates are con­ser­v­a­tive. The seven pro­vi­sions exam­ined cover only about one-fourth of the recov­ery act’s total spend­ing. The remain­der of the act con­tains an array of pro­vi­sions that also have an effect on poverty either through direct job cre­ation or through increased spend­ing (on areas such as edu­ca­tion, health care, and hous­ing) that leads to more con­sumer demand in the econ­omy, which in turn pre­serves or cre­ates jobs. The Con­gres­sional Bud­get Office has esti­mated that the leg­is­la­tion as a whole had increased employ­ment by 600,000 to 1.6 mil­lion jobs as of Sep­tem­ber 2009 and is expected to boost employ­ment by 900,000 to 2.3 mil­lion jobs by the fourth quar­ter of this year.[2]

More­over, this analy­sis does not cap­ture the full anti-poverty impact of the seven pro­vi­sions it exam­ines. It con­sid­ers the pro­vi­sions’ direct effects on the incomes of the fam­i­lies that receive added income or ben­e­fits as a result of these pro­vi­sions, but not the pro­vi­sions’ addi­tional effects on the econ­omy and private-sector employ­ment. For exam­ple, increased job­less ben­e­fits or food stamps pre­serve private-sector jobs in a reces­sion by enabling con­sumers to con­tinue pur­chas­ing goods and ser­vices they oth­er­wise could not have afforded. That addi­tional spend­ing, in turn, rip­ples through the econ­omy, help­ing stores and com­pa­nies to stay in busi­ness and avoid steeper lay­offs and reduc­tions in work hours, and thereby averts larger increases in poverty.

Con­gress designed the recov­ery act to reach a wide spec­trum of low-, moderate-, and middle-income Amer­i­cans. Pol­i­cy­mak­ers took care to include pro­vi­sions that pro­vide assis­tance to low-income fam­i­lies, not only because they stand the great­est risk of hard­ship dur­ing down­turns but also because of evi­dence that they are the most likely to spend quickly what­ever money they receive, thereby pump­ing more money back into the econ­omy in a timely manner.

Our analy­sis con­sid­ers seven of the act’s tem­po­rary pro­vi­sions, total­ing $205 bil­lion over five years:

* a new Mak­ing Work Pay tax credit of up to $400 for work­ers ($800 for a cou­ple) earn­ing up to $95,000 ($190,000 for a cou­ple);
* an expanded Child Tax Credit for lower-income work­ing fam­i­lies with chil­dren;
* an expanded Earned Income Tax Credit, includ­ing increased tax-credit ben­e­fits for a work­ing fam­ily with three or more chil­dren and for mar­ried fam­i­lies to lessen the mar­riage penalty the EITC can oth­er­wise impose;
* addi­tional weeks of emer­gency unem­ploy­ment com­pen­sa­tion ben­e­fits (paid after a worker’s 26 weeks of reg­u­lar state unem­ploy­ment ben­e­fits expire);
* an addi­tional $25 per week for unem­ployed work­ers to sup­ple­ment their unem­ploy­ment ben­e­fits;
* a $250 one-time pay­ment to elderly peo­ple and peo­ple with dis­abil­i­ties who receive Social Secu­rity, SSI, or vet­er­ans’ ben­e­fits; and
* an increase in food stamp ben­e­fit levels.

The study is likely to be a very con­tro­ver­sial one, with peo­ple on all sides of the polit­i­cal spec­trum mak­ing com­ments, neg­a­tive on the right, pos­i­tive on the left. We do won­der how many will point out that these num­bers are only tem­po­rary. As soon as the stim­u­lus money runs out, these peo­ple will fall back into poverty, unless jobs replace the stim­u­lus funds.



This article is from Poverty News Blog: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/EOch/~3/-f2X4eltopI/stimulus-brings-6-million-out-of.html




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