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R. Mendenhall, K. Edin, S. Crowley, Jennifer Sykes, Laura Tach, Katrin Kriẑ, J. Kling (2012)
The Role of Earned Income Tax Credit in the Budgets of Low-Income HouseholdsSocial Service Review, 86
Damon Jones (2010)
Information, Preferences, and Public Benefit Participation: Experimental Evidence from the Advance EITC and 401(k) SavingsAmerican Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2
S. Greene (2012)
The Broken Safety Net: A Study of Earned Income Tax Credit Recipients and a Proposal for RepairDuke Law School Public Law & Legal Theory Research Paper Series
Gilda Azurdia, Stephen Freedman, G. Hamilton, Caroline Schultz (2014)
Encouraging Low- and Moderate-Income Tax Filers to Save: Implementation and Interim Impact Findings from the SaveUSA EvaluationERN: Other Microeconomics: Intertemporal Consumer Choice & Savings (Topic)
Leonard Burman, Christopher Geissler, E. Toder (2008)
How Big Are Total Individual Income Tax Expenditures, and Who Benefits from Them?The American Economic Review, 98
Katharine Edin, Laura Tach, S. Halpern-Meekin (2014)
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E. Wolff, M. Gittleman (2012)
Inheritances and the distribution of wealth or whatever happened to the great inheritance boom?The Journal of Economic Inequality, 12
T. Coburn (2011)
Back in Black: A Deficit Reduction Plan
[Nearly all families experience fluctuations in income, and low- and moderate-income (LMI) families appear increasingly likely to experience significant income interruptions (see Collins, this volume). Almost half of Americans are “liquid asset poor,” meaning they lack even a modest amount of accessible savings to tap into in the case of an emergency (Brooks et al. 2014). Liquid savings and long-term savings or assets are quite different forms of financial resources. Using long-term savings as liquid savings can have serious consequences. For example, withdrawals from retirement or education savings accounts often come with significant financial penalties. Likewise, borrowing against home equity can be difficult, especially in the short term. In the case of an emergency, households without accessible savings must rely on family, friends, high-cost credit, or the high costs of missing payments.]
Published: Nov 3, 2015
Keywords: Capital Gain; Investment Income; Congressional Budget Office; Liquid Saving; National Priority Project
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