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What Congress missed in lame duck session


Parents and children participate in a demonstration organized by the ParentsTogether Foundation in support of the child tax credit portion of the Build Back Better bill outside of the U.S. Capitol on Dec. 13, 2021.

Sarah Silbiger | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Washington lawmakers are rushing to get as much done as possible before the calendar year and the lame-duck session of Congress runs out.

Some changes poised to go through could have a big impact on Americans’ finances, namely some big retirement savings updates poised to get included in a year-end spending bill.

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But some other proposed initiatives have not made the cut, and that may also have a big impact on individuals’ and families’ finances until Congress has the chance to revisit them again.

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“Policy advances that would address the everyday needs of low-income people and families were largely left out, despite efforts by many policymakers,” Sharon Parrott, president of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, recently wrote of the year-end omnibus package that would keep the government funded through much of 2023.

The “unfinished business” leaves a to-do list for lawmakers on both sides of the aisle next year, she said.

Here’s how the issues that missed the cut this year may crop up again in 2023.

Child tax credit enhancement

Congress reaches deal on $1.7 trillion funding bill

The 2021 child tax credit expansion was very successful in driving down child poverty to a record low and helping families meet record costs, Marr noted.

“I think there was a compromise there to be had, and it didn’t happen,” Marr said.

On the bright side, the same compromise to re-up the child tax credit alongside corporate tax breaks may come up again in 2023, he said.

Some lawmakers have insisted the child tax credit gets included in any new tax legislation. “It’s pretty simple — no corporate tax cuts without tax cuts for working families,” Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, recently said.

Yet other leaders want to see more rules attached to the child tax credit, such as work requirements, which will likely require compromise, and could mean any new policy may be less generous than the 2021 expansion.

“I think those conversations are going to be starting early next year and continuing throughout the year,” said Shai Akabas, director of economic policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center.

Supplemental Security Income updates

We continue to see a lack of sufficient political will to allow people with disabilities to save.

Rebecca Vallas

senior fellow at The Century Foundation

Today, the program’s asset limits are $3,000 per couple and $2,000 for individuals. That not only limits the amount of savings beneficiaries may have, but it also imposes a marriage penalty on beneficiaries.

“SSI’s punitive and archaic asset limit is the most egregious anti-savings measure in federal law today,” said Rebecca Vallas, senior fellow at The Century Foundation and co-director of the think tank’s Disability Economic Justice Collaborative.

“Yet we continue to see a lack of sufficient political will to allow people with disabilities to save,” Vallas said.

The fate of the proposal is unclear since Portman is retiring this year and it remains to be seen whether another Republican leader will step up to support it, Akabas said.

“It’s going to probably be some time before that gets another opportunity,” Akabas said.

Social Security program funding

The additional funding could have helped the Social Security Administration reduce its backlog and long waits for service by updating its technology systems and hire new staff, Romig noted.

“Instead, applicants and beneficiaries face another year of unacceptable waits for the Social Security and other benefits they’ve earned,” Romig wrote.

Congress likely will not revisit funding for the Social Security Administration until next fall, according to Akabas.

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