The Working Families
Tax Credit:
Help Hard-Working Families Become Self-Sufficient |
|
A Working Families Tax Credit provides crucial
tax relief to hard-working, low-income families, helping them
close the gap between what they earn and what they need to make
ends meet. This credit also returns millions of dollars to families
who put the money back into the state economy.
Eighteen states and the District of Columbia have
enacted similar tax credit for working families, including the
Western and Plains states of Oregon, Colorado, Kansas and Oklahoma.
It's time for New Mexico to follow their lead and help our working
families by enacting a 7.5 percent refundable Working Families
Tax Credit in the 2006 legislative session.
- Why should New Mexico enact a Working Families
Tax Credit?
This credit can make a significant difference for hard-working
families.
The federal Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is the single most
effective policy that lifts low-income working families out
of poverty. The National Center for Children in Poverty found
that the federal EITC reduces child poverty for young children
by nearly 25 percent. A state Working Families Tax Credit builds
on the benefits of the federal EITC.
- These tax credits have a long history of bi-partisan
support.
Enacted in 1975 under President Ford, and expanded under Republican
and Democratic administrations, the federal EITC is supported
by policy makers on both sides of the aisle. At the state level,
working family tax credits have been enacted under both Democratic
and Republican governors.
- The Working Families Tax Credit effects rural
families more than urban families.
In 2002, 180,000 New Mexico households in every rural, suburban,
and urban community claimed the federal EITC, bringing back
$321 million to low-wage earners. But, 28% of the people claiming
the federal EITC lived in rural areas of the state.
- A state Working Families Tax Credit stimulates
the local economy.
Local residents often spend their refunds where they live and
thereby help boost the local economy. Because so many of the
people receiving the EITC live in rural areas, this credit piggyback
credit is an extra boost for rural areas.
Who would benefit from a Working Families Tax
Credit in New Mexico?
Working families with incomes up to $37,263 qualify for the federal
EITC, which would be the same threshold for the Working Families
Tax Credit in New Mexico. New Mexico currently has a Low Income
Comprehensive Tax Rebate (LICTR) which gives low-income people
making up to $22,000 a year a rebate on sales tax regardless of
employment status. A taxpayer would have to choose between the
two credits, but about 60,000 new families will qualify for refunds
under the Working Families Tax Credit, and some families currently
receiving LICTR will qualify for larger refunds.
How would a "refundable" Working
Families Tax Credit work in New Mexico?
The beauty of this credit is its simplicity. The Working Families
Tax Credit would piggyback on the federal EITC, making it very
simple to administer. Families who qualify for the federal EITC
would also qualify for the Working Families Tax Credit. New Mexico
would not have to worry about fraud as the federal government
monitors EITC fraud.
| |