17 research outputs found
Children's Health Insurance and National Health Policy
Health Economics and Policy, Labor and Human Capital,
Anatomy of a Community-Level Fiscal Impact Model: FIT-4-NH.
Abstract: This paper describes the development of a fiscal impact tool for New Hampshire communities (HT -4-NH). FIT -4-NH belongs to a family of computergenerated fiscal impact assessment models designed to estimate the impacts to local government revenues and expenditures that result from economic changes. In the past, work in this area has centered on the completion of countylevel models for the midwestern states. FIT-4-NH is unique in that it was designed for rural community-level use in the northern New England region of the country
Rural America Benefits From Expanded Use of the Federal Tax Code for Income Support
Over the past two decades, the Federal tax code increasingly has been used as a tool for
achieving social and other policy objectives, primarily through the expanded use of tax credits. A larger share of rural taxpayers benefit from Federal tax policies aimed at lower income taxpayers because they have historically had lower incomes and higher poverty rates than urban households. The earned income and child tax credits have provided a substantial boost in income to low and middle-income rural taxpayers and have reduced the rural poverty rate
The Concentration of Poverty Is a Growing Rural Problem
Concentrated poverty has increased in the
U.S. over the last decade, particularly in
nonmetropolitan areas and in areas with
distinct racial/ethnic minority populations. Historical regional concentrations of high
poverty persist in the South, but there is
evidence of emergent concentrations in
the West and Midwest. The spread of nonmetropolitan
concentrated poverty is associated with
the recent economic recession and the
slow pace of the recovery