This report was updated on March 5, 2008 to reflect new data.  Click here to view the new analysis.

February 7, 2007

HOW MUCH WOULD A STATE EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT COST IN 2008?
by Sloane Kuney and Jason Levitis

Twenty 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 2007 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  The first set is preliminary unpublished Internal Revenue Service data on the total value of federal EITC claims filed by residents of each state.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 2005 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 2005 EITCs was incurred in federal fiscal year 2006 (which ended in October 2006).  Similarly, in most states the cost of tax year 2007 claims will fall in the state fiscal year that ends in 2008.

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 2008 Budget, released in February 2007, suggests that the federal EITC will cost some $42.9 billion in federal fiscal year 2008, 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 2005, Alabama EITC claims totaled $1.06 billion, or 2.56 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 2008 would be 2.56 percent of $42.9 billion, or $1.1 billion, as shown in the fourth column of Table 2.

TABLE 1:
PROJECTIONS OF FEDERAL EITC COST

Fiscal Year

Cost (billions)

2006

$41.2

2007

$41.8

2008

$42.9

2009

$43.7

2010

$44.7

2011

$46.2

Sources: Budget of the United States Government - FY 2008, 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.  In addition, some eligible families have the IRS compute their federal credit; 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 2008 of implementing refundable EITCs for tax year 2007, 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 forthcoming Center on Budget and Policy Priorities publication entitled A Hand Up: How State Earned Income Tax Credits Help Working Families Escape Poverty, available on the Center’s web site, www.cbpp.org.


End Notes:

[1] Compared to the cost each state would have incurred if every family claiming the federal credit also claimed the state credit, the actual cost of a newly-enacted state EITC in its first year of availability was about 81 percent in Vermont, 83 percent in New York, 85 percent in Wisconsin, 88 percent in Oklahoma, 90 percent in Kansas and Minnesota, 91 percent in Colorado, and 97 percent in Massachusetts.  In the second year of availability in each state, the cost in Vermont rose to 85 percent, the cost in New York rose to 90 percent and the cost in Minnesota rose to 93 percent relative to the full-participation cost.

 
Document Resources:
  pdf PDF of full report
  E-mail to a friend
  Print

Report Categories:
  All Reports by Date
  State Budget and Tax

CBPP Services:
  E-mail Notifications
  RSS Alerts

TABLE 2:
ESTIMATED COST OF REFUNDABLE STATE EARNED INCOME TAX  CREDITS

State

Amount of Federal EITC Claims, TY 2005
($ millions)

Percent of Total U.S. EITC Claims, TY 2005

Estimated Cost of Federal EITC in FY 2008
($ millions)

Estimated Cost of

State EITC in FY 2008

Set at 5% of Federal Credit*
($ millions)

Set at 10% of Federal Credit*
($ millions)

Set at 20% of Federal Credit*
($ millions)

   Alabama

1,058

2.56%

1,098

49

99

198

   Alaska

64

0.16%

67

3

6

12

   Arizona

751

1.81%

778

35

70

140

   Arkansas

559

1.35%

580

26

52

104

   California

4,374

10.57%

4,537

204

408

817

   Colorado

450

1.09%

466

21

42

84

   Connecticut

279

0.67%

289

13

26

52

   Delaware**

104

0.25%

108

5

10

20

   Florida

2,947

7.12%

3,056

138

275

550

   Georgia

1,813

4.38%

1,881

85

169

339

   Hawaii

139

0.34%

144

6

13

26

   Idaho

186

0.45%

193

9

17

35

   Iowa**

291

0.70%

302

14

27

54

   Kentucky

635

1.53%

658

30

59

118

   Louisiana

1,080

2.61%

1,120

50

101

202

   Maine**

144

0.35%

149

7

13

27

   Mississippi

821

1.99%

852

38

77

153

   Missouri

811

1.96%

841

38

76

151

   Montana

124

0.30%

128

6

12

23

   Nevada

285

0.69%

296

13

27

53

   New Hampshire

99

0.24%

103

5

9

19

   New Mexico

367

0.89%

381

17

34

69

   North Carolina

1,483

3.58%

1,538

69

138

277

   North Dakota

65

0.16%

68

3

6

12

   Ohio

1,435

3.47%

1,489

67

134

268

   Pennsylvania

1,348

3.26%

1,398

63

126

252

   South Carolina

844

2.04%

875

39

79

157

   South Dakota

95

0.23%

98

4

9

18

   Tennessee

1,048

2.53%

1,087

49

98

196

   Texas

4,684

11.32%

4,858

219

437

874

   Utah

255

0.62%

264

12

24

48

   Virginia**

888

2.15%

921

41

83

166

   Washington

604

1.46%

626

28

56

113

   West Virginia

256

0.62%

266

12

24

48

   Wyoming

55

0.13%

57

3

5

10

   Other Areas

52

0.13%

54

2

5

10

States That Have Enacted Refundable EITCs

 

 

 

 

   District of Columbia

82

0.20%

85

 

 

 

   Illinois

1,599

3.87%

1,659

 

 

 

   Indiana

789

1.91%

818

 

 

 

   Kansas

312

0.75%

324

 

 

 

   Maryland

596

1.44%

619

 

 

 

   Massachusetts

507

1.23%

526

 

 

 

   Michigan

1,199

2.90%

1,244

 

 

 

   Minnesota

431

1.04%

447

 

 

 

   Nebraska

194

0.47%

201

 

 

 

   New Jersey

857

2.07%

889

 

 

 

   New York

2,652

6.41%

2,751

 

 

 

   Oklahoma

595

1.44%

617

 

 

 

   Oregon

380

0.92%

394

 

 

 

   Rhode Island

116

0.28%

120

 

 

 

   Vermont

59

0.14%

61

 

 

 

   Wisconsin

514

1.24%

533

 

 

 

 

U.S. Total

41,376

100.00%

42,913

 

 

 

* Estimates of state EITCs assume participation rate equal to 90 percent of federal participation.

**For Delaware, Iowa, Maine, and Virginia, cost shown is the total cost of a refundable credit; since those states already offer non-refundable credits, the added cost of making the credit refundable would be substantially less than the amount shown here.

Sources: Internal Revenue Service Supplemental Earned Income Report, January 2007; 2007 Budget of the United States Government - FY 2008, Analytical Perspectives; Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.