Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va, reportedly told colleagues privately in recent months that he believes his constituents would blow cash from the enhanced child tax credit on drugs instead of providing for their children. That belief would seem to factor into his attempt to strip the provision from President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better bill, a piece of legislation that would, among other things, extend those soon-to-expire monthly payments that began earlier this year. But the senator might find it sobering to consider data showing how much of a lifeline the tax credit has been for people receiving it.
As Bloomberg reported, U.S. Census Bureau data collected earlier this year found that people who received child tax credit payments overwhelmingly spent them on pressing necessities like food, rent, utilities, clothing and vehicle payments. According to another study by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Black and Hispanic families were disproportionately likely to spend payments on education-related costs like school supplies.
Overwhelmingly, people who have received the child tax credit payments have used it for food, rent, and utilities and to pay off debt, data from the U.S. Census Bureau has found https://t.co/kcAqczQsls
— Bloomberg (@business) December 21, 2021
The expanded child tax credit, which was signed into law in March through Biden’s Covid-19 relief bill, gives two-parent households with up to $300 a month per child to assist with providing for children. Its first installment this summer lifted 3 million children out of poverty. Now nearly 10 million children are at risk of falling back below the poverty line or even deeper into poverty when the enhanced child tax credit are set to expire at the end of this month.
Manchin could presumably counter that this data wouldn’t allay his concern insofar as respondents to surveys won’t be honest about spending government aid on illicit drugs. But that’s a shortsighted, reactionary talking point that fails to account for the tremendous value of the program — including for people addicted to drugs.








