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How Much Would a State Earned Income Tax Credit Cost in 2009?

Twenty-three states have enacted tax credits for low- and moderate-income working families based on the federal Earned Income Tax Credit. A number of additional states are considering enacting EITCs in the 2008 legislative session. The following provides guidelines that policymakers and others can use to estimate the cost of a refundable state Earned Income Tax Credit that is set at a percentage of the federal credit. The estimating procedure is a simple three-step process.

The estimating procedure makes use of two sets of data. The first set is preliminary unpublished Internal Revenue Service data on the total value of federal EITC claims filed by residents of each state. The most recent full-year data, shown in the second column of Table 2, are for claims made for the 2006 tax year.

All but a tiny fraction of federal EITCs claimed for a given year are claimed and paid when taxes are filed in January through April of the following year. As a result, nearly all of the cost for tax year 2008 EITCs will be incurred in federal fiscal year 2009 (which ends in September 2009). Similarly, in most states the cost of tax year 2008 claims will fall in the state fiscal year that ends in 2009.

The second data source is the Office of Management and Budget’s projections of the cost of the federal EITC in future years, published in the President’s Budget. For example, the Fiscal Year 2009 Budget, released in February 2008, suggests that the federal EITC will cost some $46.5 billion in federal fiscal year 2009, including both the tax expenditure (non-refundable) and outlay (refundable) portions, as shown in Table 1.

Using these data, the cost of a refundable state EITC is relatively easy to estimate.

Step 1: Estimate the total value of federal EITC claims in a given state for a future fiscal year.

The cost of the federal EITC in a state in a future fiscal year may be estimated by calculating the share of the federal EITC attributable to the state in the base year and applying that share to the expected total cost of the federal EITC in a future year. For example, for tax year 2006, Alabama EITC claims totaled $1.10 billion, or 2.55 percent of the nationwide total. Assuming that Alabama’s share of federal EITC claims remains approximately constant, Alabama’s federal EITC claims in fiscal year 2009 would be 2.55 percent of $46.5 billion, or $1.18 billion, as shown in the fourth column of Table 2.

TABLE 1:
PROJECTIONS OF FEDERAL EITC COST

Fiscal Year Cost (billions)
2007 $43.3
2008 $44.7
2009 $46.5
2010 $48.7
2011 $49.3
Sources: Budget of the United States Government - FY 2009, Analytical Perspectives; Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Step 2: Multiply the state’s expected federal EITC claims by the percentage at which the state credit is to be set.

If the state EITC is set at a fixed percentage of the federal EITC, the cost of the federal credit in the state, as determined in Step 1, should be multiplied by the percentage rate. This yields an estimate of what the state credit would cost in a given fiscal year if everyone who receives the federal credit also receives the state credit.

Step 3: Adjust the estimate for the fact that not all federal EITC claimants will claim the state credit.

In practice, a substantial portion of federal EITC claimants fail to claim state EITCs, especially in the first few years after the state credit is enacted.[1] This appears to be true for several reasons. Awareness of the credit may be limited in the first few years after enactment of the state credit. Some eligible families have the IRS compute their federal credit, and such families may not receive a state EITC if the state does not compute the state credit amount for them. For these and other reasons, the cost of a refundable state EITC in its initial years after enactment is likely to be lower than the full cost of the federal credit multiplied by the state percentage. To reflect this difference, the cost estimate should be reduced by at least 10 percent.

The last three columns of Table 2 show the estimated costs to states in fiscal year 2009 of implementing refundable EITCs for tax year 2008, based on the method described above. The three columns show the cost for EITCs set respectively at 5 percent, 10 percent, and 20 percent of the federal credit.

Other percentages may be calculated based on those numbers (for instance, the cost of a 15 percent credit would be one-and-a-half times the cost of a 10 percent credit). The same method may be used for other years, using the projections of federal cost shown in Table 1. None of these figures includes the costs of changing tax forms to include a space to claim an EITC or the costs of processing and administering EITC claims; these costs are likely to increase the overall cost of the credit by less than one percent.

The estimates presented here only apply to credits that are refundable and that are set at a flat percent of the federal EITC. Further information on these estimates and on methods of estimating the costs of non-refundable credits and different credit structures may be obtained from the staff of the State Fiscal Project at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Further information on the policy implications of state EITCs may be obtained by calling the Center or by reviewing the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities publication entitled A Hand Up: How State Earned Income Tax Credits Help Working Families Escape Poverty.