Scholar: Expand Pro-Child Tax Policies, 
Tax the Childless Rich



By _Napp  Nazworth_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/napp-nazworth/) , 
Christian Post Reporter
December 10, 2012|6:44 am
WASHINGTON – Public policy should favor child bearing  and rearing, 
panelists argued Friday at a Washington, D.C., symposium called  "Demography 
and 
Public Policy: Can the Right Policy Mix Reverse Family  Breakdown?"
Allan Carlson, president of The Howard Center for Family, Religion &  
Society, argued that in the current debate over the "fiscal cliff" he would  
favor expanding the child tax credit for the wealthy in exchange for higher tax 
 
rates on the wealthy. 
Carlson suggests increasing the child tax credit to $1,250 per child. (It 
is  currently $1,000 per child, but will return to $500 per child if no 
agreement is  reached on the fiscal cliff.) The credit is phased out for 
couples 
earning more  than $110,000. Carlson favors increasing that cap and paying 
for it with higher  tax rates on the wealthy, thus benefiting the wealthy who 
bear and raise  children while increasing taxes on the childless wealthy. 
"I would happily trade an increase in the top bracket to, say, 38 percent 
for  an extension of the child credit to high earners as well," Carlson said. 
"Or,  put more bluntly, stick the full tax increase solely on the childless 
rich and  call it the 'Mr. Potter tax,' a reference to the iconic, 
child-indifferent  plutocrat in 'It's a Wonderful Life.'" 
Carlson's message was delivered as Pew Research Center recently reported 
that  the nation's birth rate is at a record low and the number of Americans 
choosing  to marry continues to decline. 
In the 1930s and 1940s, Carlson said, there were bipartisan agreements on  
policies that encouraged child bearing and family formation. Carlson 
believes  that these policies encouraged the marriage boom and baby boom in the 
1950s,  which, in turn, contributed to the economic success of the United 
States in that  era.
 
In particular, Carlson mentioned changes made to Social Security in 1939 
that  created a homemaker's pension based upon a husband's salary and survivor 
 benefits, and tax code changes in 1948 that increased the tax exemption 
for  children to make it equal with adults and "income splitting," which 
placed most  married couples in lower tax brackets. 
Since that time, though, the U.S. government engaged in policies that had 
the  opposite effect. In some cases, the government ended the previous 
pro-natalist  policies. In other cases, the government enacted new policies 
that 
contributed  to the "baby bust" in the 1970s. 
Carlson cited a study demonstrating that a modest pension system encourages 
 the bearing and raising of children, but a more generous system, as Social 
 Security became in the 1960s, has the opposite effect. One of the 
incentives for  having children (so they can take care of you when you are 
elderly) 
is taken  away and everyone benefits regardless of how many children they 
have, the  argument goes. Stated another way -- why have children to take care 
of you when  you are old when someone else's children can take care of you 
when you are  old?
 
Besides expanding the child tax credit, Carlson had three additional policy 
 proposals intended to reverse the decline in child bearing and _marriage_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/marriage/) . 
First, Social Security beneficiaries should get a bonus for the number of  
children they raised who reach the age of 19 without a criminal record and 
with  a high school diploma. 
"Short of abolishing Social Security," Carlson said, "this is the best way 
to  recognize the dependence of the whole system on a reasonably high 
fertility and  compensate for the system's anti-natalism." 
Second, the tax credit for the costs of dependent care should also go to  
parents who provide full time care for their own children at home. 
"Such families tend to record higher completed fertility," Carlson 
explained.  "Beyond that, it's simple fairness." 
And third, the government should forgive 25 percent (up to $5,000) of the  
federal student loan debt for every child born to or adopted by parents,  
because, "this is the best way to undo the human damage created by the  
system." 
Conservative New York Times columnist David Brooks was a discussant on the  
panel. In his remarks, Brooks said that he supports Carlson's agenda but 
has  limited expectations about how much these policies could reverse the 
declines in  birth and marriage. It was changes in _culture_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/culture/) , not government  policy, which 
had the greatest 
influence on changing birth and marriage rates,  Brooks believes. 
Nonetheless, Brooks argued that government policy can contribute to "subtle 
 shifts in culture." The best way to do that, Brooks said, is to "flood the 
 zone," meaning enact a lot of policies aimed at the problem all at  once.

-- 
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