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PANDEMIC UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROVISIONS: WHAT THEY MEAN Example: Impact of Receipt of UI Through 2020. Regina lost her job in March when the restaurant she worked at closed. She applied for and began receiving SNAP, Medicaid, and TANF for herself and her two children at the end of March. DISABILITY | CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIES Social Security’s Disability Insurance (DI) program provides modest but vital benefits to workers who can no longer do substantial work due to a severe medical impairment. We work to ensure that the program is adequately funded and to analyze reform proposals to determine their impact on the program’s long-term solvency and itsbeneficiaries.
HOUSING VOUCHERS
Vouchers help more than 2 million low-income households afford decent, stable housing, usually by helping them rent a modest unit of their choice in the private One of policymakers’ top priorities in recovery legislation should be to provide housing vouchers to a larger share of families in Affordable housing is a key part of the nation UNWINDING THE MEDICAID CONTINUOUS COVERAGE PROVISION: WHAT Returned Mail. When states resume regular operations, many notices will likely be returned as undeliverable. Rather than terminating people’s coverage based on returned mail, states should take proactive steps to try to contact the enrollee including by texting, calling, and emailing. POLICY BASICS: POLICIES TO REDUCE GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS Policy Basics: Policies to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions. PDF of this policy basics (2pp.) Cap and trade and its close cousin a carbon tax are the approaches that most economists favor for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. These market-based approaches work by creating incentives for businesses and households to conserve energy,improve
SHARON PARROTT
Sharon Parrott is President of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Parrott has nearly three decades of experience at the Center and in government. Her expertise spans a broad range of issues, including policies to reduce poverty and expand opportunity, the intersection of the federal budget and low-income programs, and theuse of data
CHILD NUTRITION AND WIC The School Lunch and School Breakfast programs provide free and reduced-price meals to over 20 million low-income school children, while WIC provides nutritious food for about 7 million low-income women, infants, and children. We promote efforts to increase school meal participation for low-income children through tools like theCommunity
2017 TAX LAW TILTED TOWARD WEALTHY AND CORPORATIONS The 2017 tax law cuts the corporate tax rate from 35 to 21 percent and shifts toward a territorial tax system, in which multinational corporations’ foreign profits will largely no longer face U.S. tax. Fully one-third of the benefits from cutting corporate rates ultimately flow to the top 1 percent, TPC estimates. Creating a 20percent
HOMEPAGE | CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIESFEDERAL BUDGETFEDERAL TAXSTATE BUDGET AND TAXHEALTHSOCIAL SECURITYECONOMY Informing debates. Shaping policy. Producing results. The nation now needs to make investments in children, workers, and health care that will enable more people to reach their full potential. FEDERAL ACTION NEEDED TO CLOSE MEDICAID “COVERAGE GAP The American Rescue Plan, which President Biden signed into law in March, gives the 12 states that have not expanded their Medicaid program under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) a big financial incentive to do so: a two-year, 5-percentage-point increase in the share of costs in their underlying Medicaid program that the federal governmentwill pay.
PANDEMIC UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROVISIONS: WHAT THEY MEAN Example: Impact of Receipt of UI Through 2020. Regina lost her job in March when the restaurant she worked at closed. She applied for and began receiving SNAP, Medicaid, and TANF for herself and her two children at the end of March. DISABILITY | CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIES Social Security’s Disability Insurance (DI) program provides modest but vital benefits to workers who can no longer do substantial work due to a severe medical impairment. We work to ensure that the program is adequately funded and to analyze reform proposals to determine their impact on the program’s long-term solvency and itsbeneficiaries.
HOUSING VOUCHERS
Vouchers help more than 2 million low-income households afford decent, stable housing, usually by helping them rent a modest unit of their choice in the private One of policymakers’ top priorities in recovery legislation should be to provide housing vouchers to a larger share of families in Affordable housing is a key part of the nation UNWINDING THE MEDICAID CONTINUOUS COVERAGE PROVISION: WHAT Returned Mail. When states resume regular operations, many notices will likely be returned as undeliverable. Rather than terminating people’s coverage based on returned mail, states should take proactive steps to try to contact the enrollee including by texting, calling, and emailing. POLICY BASICS: POLICIES TO REDUCE GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS Policy Basics: Policies to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions. PDF of this policy basics (2pp.) Cap and trade and its close cousin a carbon tax are the approaches that most economists favor for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. These market-based approaches work by creating incentives for businesses and households to conserve energy,improve
SHARON PARROTT
Sharon Parrott is President of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Parrott has nearly three decades of experience at the Center and in government. Her expertise spans a broad range of issues, including policies to reduce poverty and expand opportunity, the intersection of the federal budget and low-income programs, and theuse of data
CHILD NUTRITION AND WIC The School Lunch and School Breakfast programs provide free and reduced-price meals to over 20 million low-income school children, while WIC provides nutritious food for about 7 million low-income women, infants, and children. We promote efforts to increase school meal participation for low-income children through tools like theCommunity
2017 TAX LAW TILTED TOWARD WEALTHY AND CORPORATIONS The 2017 tax law cuts the corporate tax rate from 35 to 21 percent and shifts toward a territorial tax system, in which multinational corporations’ foreign profits will largely no longer face U.S. tax. Fully one-third of the benefits from cutting corporate rates ultimately flow to the top 1 percent, TPC estimates. Creating a 20percent
TRACKING THE COVID-19 RECESSION’S EFFECTS ON FOOD, HOUSING While employment is rising and strains on household budgets have eased in recent months, the employment rate remains low and millions still report that their households did not get enough to eat or are not caught up on rent payments. We are able to track the extent of the nation’s progress against PANDEMIC UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROVISIONS: WHAT THEY MEAN Example: Impact of Receipt of UI Through 2020. Regina lost her job in March when the restaurant she worked at closed. She applied for and began receiving SNAP, Medicaid, and TANF for herself and her two children at the end of March. POLICY BASICS: WHERE DO OUR FEDERAL TAX DOLLARS GO April 9, 2020. In fiscal year 2019, the federal government spent $4.4 trillion, amounting to 21 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP). Of that $4.4 trillion, over $3.5 trillion was financed by federal revenues. The remaining amount ($984 billion) was financed by borrowing. As the chart below shows, three major areas of spending RECOVERY LEGISLATION OFFERS CHANCE TO IMPROVE FAILING RE President Biden’s American Jobs Plan and his American Families Plan present a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reduce barriers for incarcerated people to successfully re-enter their communities by providing necessary access to nutritious foods, health care, CLOSING MEDICAID COVERAGE GAP WOULD HELP DIVERSE GROUP AND The 2.2 million uninsured adults with incomes below the poverty line who were caught in the Medicaid “coverage gap” in 2019 are a varied group — they’re essential workers, parents caring for children, older and younger adults, and diverse in terms of race and ethnicity — but they all have something in common. BIDEN BUDGET CALLS FOR PARITY FOR TERRITORIES IN CRITICAL President Biden’s 2022 budget would take a crucial step toward giving residents of U.S. territories equal access to the nation’s safety net. Without offering specific funding recommendations, the budget calls for “eliminating Medicaid funding caps for Puerto Rico and other Territories while TARGETED TEXT MESSAGE OUTREACH CAN INCREASE WIC ENROLLMENT Targeted text messaging offers a promising option to states planning strategies to reach more families eligible for WIC, as several recent pilot programs have shown it may help increase awareness about and enrollment in the program. WHY EXPANDING HOUSING CHOICE VOUCHERS IS ESSENTIAL TO The legislation balances strategies that address affordability, housing supply, services, and technical assistance for communities. It supports significant progress by quickly providing safe and permanent housing through an expansion of the Housing Choice Voucher program to millions of households at the lowest income levels. HOUSING CHOICE VOUCHERS SHARPLY REDUCED CROWDED HOUSING Center on Budget and Policy Priorities 1275 First Street NE, Suite 1200 Washington, DC 20002 ADOPTING A STATE-BASED HEALTH INSURANCE MARKETPLACE POSES States should develop targets by analyzing data on their remaining uninsured populations. Across states, the majority of the remaining uninsured have incomes low enough to qualify for subsidized marketplace coverage or Medicaid. HOMEPAGE | CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIESFEDERAL BUDGETFEDERAL TAXSTATE BUDGET AND TAXHEALTHSOCIAL SECURITYECONOMY Informing debates. Shaping policy. Producing results. The nation now needs to make investments in children, workers, and health care that will enable more people to reach their full potential. FEDERAL ACTION NEEDED TO CLOSE MEDICAID “COVERAGE GAP The American Rescue Plan, which President Biden signed into law in March, gives the 12 states that have not expanded their Medicaid program under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) a big financial incentive to do so: a two-year, 5-percentage-point increase in the share of costs in their underlying Medicaid program that the federal governmentwill pay.
HOUSING VOUCHERS
Vouchers help more than 2 million low-income households afford decent, stable housing, usually by helping them rent a modest unit of their choice in the private One of policymakers’ top priorities in recovery legislation should be to provide housing vouchers to a larger share of families in Affordable housing is a key part of the nation POLICY BASICS: WHERE DO OUR FEDERAL TAX DOLLARS GO April 9, 2020. In fiscal year 2019, the federal government spent $4.4 trillion, amounting to 21 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP). Of that $4.4 trillion, over $3.5 trillion was financed by federal revenues. The remaining amount ($984 billion) was financed by borrowing. As the chart below shows, three major areas of spending DISABILITY | CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIES Social Security’s Disability Insurance (DI) program provides modest but vital benefits to workers who can no longer do substantial work due to a severe medical impairment. We work to ensure that the program is adequately funded and to analyze reform proposals to determine their impact on the program’s long-term solvency and itsbeneficiaries.
CHILD NUTRITION AND WIC The School Lunch and School Breakfast programs provide free and reduced-price meals to over 20 million low-income school children, while WIC provides nutritious food for about 7 million low-income women, infants, and children. We promote efforts to increase school meal participation for low-income children through tools like theCommunity
SHARON PARROTT
Sharon Parrott is President of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Parrott has nearly three decades of experience at the Center and in government. Her expertise spans a broad range of issues, including policies to reduce poverty and expand opportunity, the intersection of the federal budget and low-income programs, and theuse of data
POLICY BASICS: PROPERTY TAX CAPS Policy Basics: Property Tax Caps. December 18, 2008. PDF of this Policy Basics (2pp.) The property tax is a major source of funding for public safety, schools, roads, libraries, and other services in most American communities. In recent decades, concern over rising property tax bills has led a number of states to impose some form of limit onMICHAEL LEACHMAN
Michael Leachman is Vice President for State Fiscal Policy at CBPP. He directs the Center’s state policy research, overseeing analyses of state policy trends, how federal policy decisions affect states, and state policy choices that improve equity and boost opportunity. Prior to joining the Center in 2009, Leachman was a policy analyst for TRUMP BUDGET CONTINUES MULTI-YEAR ASSAULT ON IRS FUNDING The IRS has been targeted for sharp funding cuts since 2010. Its current budget of $11.2 billion is 18 percent below the 2010 level, after adjusting for inflation. As most IRS funding goes to staffing, the cuts have forced the IRS to dramatically reduce its workforce; the agency lost roughly 13,000 employees — around 14 percent of its workforce — between 2010 and 2016. HOMEPAGE | CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIESFEDERAL BUDGETFEDERAL TAXSTATE BUDGET AND TAXHEALTHSOCIAL SECURITYECONOMY Informing debates. Shaping policy. Producing results. The nation now needs to make investments in children, workers, and health care that will enable more people to reach their full potential. FEDERAL ACTION NEEDED TO CLOSE MEDICAID “COVERAGE GAP The American Rescue Plan, which President Biden signed into law in March, gives the 12 states that have not expanded their Medicaid program under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) a big financial incentive to do so: a two-year, 5-percentage-point increase in the share of costs in their underlying Medicaid program that the federal governmentwill pay.
HOUSING VOUCHERS
Vouchers help more than 2 million low-income households afford decent, stable housing, usually by helping them rent a modest unit of their choice in the private One of policymakers’ top priorities in recovery legislation should be to provide housing vouchers to a larger share of families in Affordable housing is a key part of the nation POLICY BASICS: WHERE DO OUR FEDERAL TAX DOLLARS GO April 9, 2020. In fiscal year 2019, the federal government spent $4.4 trillion, amounting to 21 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP). Of that $4.4 trillion, over $3.5 trillion was financed by federal revenues. The remaining amount ($984 billion) was financed by borrowing. As the chart below shows, three major areas of spending DISABILITY | CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIES Social Security’s Disability Insurance (DI) program provides modest but vital benefits to workers who can no longer do substantial work due to a severe medical impairment. We work to ensure that the program is adequately funded and to analyze reform proposals to determine their impact on the program’s long-term solvency and itsbeneficiaries.
CHILD NUTRITION AND WIC The School Lunch and School Breakfast programs provide free and reduced-price meals to over 20 million low-income school children, while WIC provides nutritious food for about 7 million low-income women, infants, and children. We promote efforts to increase school meal participation for low-income children through tools like theCommunity
SHARON PARROTT
Sharon Parrott is President of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Parrott has nearly three decades of experience at the Center and in government. Her expertise spans a broad range of issues, including policies to reduce poverty and expand opportunity, the intersection of the federal budget and low-income programs, and theuse of data
POLICY BASICS: PROPERTY TAX CAPS Policy Basics: Property Tax Caps. December 18, 2008. PDF of this Policy Basics (2pp.) The property tax is a major source of funding for public safety, schools, roads, libraries, and other services in most American communities. In recent decades, concern over rising property tax bills has led a number of states to impose some form of limit onMICHAEL LEACHMAN
Michael Leachman is Vice President for State Fiscal Policy at CBPP. He directs the Center’s state policy research, overseeing analyses of state policy trends, how federal policy decisions affect states, and state policy choices that improve equity and boost opportunity. Prior to joining the Center in 2009, Leachman was a policy analyst for TRUMP BUDGET CONTINUES MULTI-YEAR ASSAULT ON IRS FUNDING The IRS has been targeted for sharp funding cuts since 2010. Its current budget of $11.2 billion is 18 percent below the 2010 level, after adjusting for inflation. As most IRS funding goes to staffing, the cuts have forced the IRS to dramatically reduce its workforce; the agency lost roughly 13,000 employees — around 14 percent of its workforce — between 2010 and 2016. COVERAGE FOR COVID-19 TESTING, VACCINATIONS, AND TREATMENT Individuals in Medicaid optional COVID-19 group. States may take up this option to cover testing, vaccination, and treatment for uninsured individuals, regardless of income. Individuals in limited-benefit Medicaid groups qualify for testing and treatment through this option, but vaccines must be covered as part of their limited-benefit Medicaid TRACKING THE COVID-19 RECESSION’S EFFECTS ON FOOD, HOUSING Joblessness remains high and millions report that their households did not get enough to eat or are not caught up on rent payments. We are able to track the extent of this hardship thanks to nearly real-time data from several sources on the ongoing economic crisis. PANDEMIC UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROVISIONS: WHAT THEY MEAN Health Insurance Marketplaces. Unlike for Medicaid, health insurance marketplaces count all UI benefits, including the additional $600 per week in PUC benefits, in determining eligibility for and the amount of advance premium tax credits (APTCs). POLICY BASICS: WHERE DO OUR FEDERAL TAX DOLLARS GO Interest on debt: The federal government must make regular interest payments on the money it borrowed to finance past deficits — that is, on the federal debt held by the public, which reached $16.8 trillion by the end of fiscal year 2019. In 2019, these interest payments claimed $375 billion, or about 8 percent of the budget. As the chart shows, the remaining fifth of federal spending RECOVERY LEGISLATION OFFERS CHANCE TO IMPROVE FAILING RE 17 hours ago · President Biden’s American Jobs Plan and his American Families Plan present a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reduce barriers for incarcerated people to successfully re-enter their communities by providing necessary access to nutritious foods, healthcare,
NEARLY 1 IN 3 CHILDREN IN RENTER HOUSEHOLDS FACE FOOD AND Center on Budget and Policy Priorities 1275 First Street NE, Suite 1200 Washington, DC 20002 FOR 1 IN 8 ADULTS WITH CHILDREN, HOUSEHOLD LACKED Center on Budget and Policy Priorities 1275 First Street NE, Suite 1200 Washington, DC 20002 1 IN 7 RENTERS NOT CAUGHT UP ON RENT DURING PANDEMIC, WITH Tracking the COVID-19 Recession’s Effects on Food, Housing, and Employment Hardships BLACK AND LATINO HOUSEHOLDS LIKELIER TO EXPERIENCE FOOD Center on Budget and Policy Priorities 1275 First Street NE, Suite 1200 Washington, DC 20002 JOB LOSSES LARGEST IN LOW-WAGE INDUSTRIES Center on Budget and Policy Priorities 1275 First Street NE, Suite 1200 Washington, DC 20002 ©2021 Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. All rights reserved.Jump to Navigation
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Informing debates. Shaping policy. Producing results.Federal Tax
Report
HOW THE FEDERAL TAX CODE CAN BETTER ADVANCE RACIAL EQUITYJuly 25, 2019
Chye-Ching Huang
Roderick Taylor
Historical racism and continuing racial prejudice and discrimination have helped to shape factors that determine households’ tax liability, and changes in tax policy and administration can widen or narrow racial disparities.Read more
Food Assistance
Statement
MISGUIDED TRUMP ADMINISTRATION RULE WOULD TAKE BASIC FOOD ASSISTANCE FROM WORKING FAMILIES, SENIORS, AND PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIESJuly 23, 2019
Robert Greenstein
Federal Budget
Statement
BUDGET DEAL AVERTS TROUBLING THREATS, ALLOWS MORE ADEQUATE FUNDING FORKEY PRIORITIES
July 22, 2019
Robert Greenstein
NEW FROM THE CENTER
Report
SNAP’S “BROAD-BASED CATEGORICAL ELIGIBILITY” SUPPORTS WORKING FAMILIES AND THOSE SAVING FOR THE FUTUREJuly 24, 2019
Dottie Rosenbaum
Research Note
MEDICAID ENROLLMENT DECLINE AMONG ADULTS AND CHILDREN TOO LARGE TO BE EXPLAINED BY FALLING UNEMPLOYMENTJuly 17, 2019
Matt Broaddus
Blog
MAINE STORIES SHOW HARM FROM SNAP’S THREE-MONTH LIMITJuly 12, 2019
Ed Bolen
Blog
RESEARCH ON UNDERSTUDIED AREA: TANF RESTRICTIONS’ HARM TOADOLESCENTS
July 12, 2019
Ashley Burnside
Blog
HOUSE BILL WOULD ENABLE U.S. TERRITORIES TO MAINTAIN, IMPROVE MEDICAIDJuly 11, 2019
Judith Solomon
Report
WHY CONGRESS SHOULDN’T REPEAL THE CADILLAC TAXJuly 11, 2019
Paul N. Van de WaterBlog
NH MEDICAID WORK REQUIREMENT SUSPENSION CONFIRMS: POLICY CAN’T BEFIXED
July 9, 2019
Jessica Schubel
Blog
TRUMP’S HEALTH CARE PLAN WOULD DO MUCH THE SAME DAMAGE AS HIS EFFORT TO REPEAL THE ACA THROUGH THE COURTSJuly 8, 2019
Aviva Aron-Dine
Report
HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE LEGISLATION WOULD EXPAND EITC AND CHILDTAX CREDIT
July 2, 2019
Chuck Marr
Yixuan Huang
Vincent Palacios
Report
DEMOGRAPHIC DATA HIGHLIGHT POTENTIAL HARM OF NEW TRUMP PROPOSAL TO RESTRICT HOUSING ASSISTANCEJuly 1, 2019
Alicia Mazzara
Report
“BLOCK GRANT” GUIDANCE WILL LIKELY INVITE MEDICAID WAIVERS THAT POSE SERIOUS RISKS TO BENEFICIARIES, PROVIDERS, AND STATESJune 27, 2019
Judith Solomon
Jessica Schubel
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