BILL NUMBER: AB 43INTRODUCED BILL TEXT INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Mark Stone DECEMBER 1, 2014 An act relating to taxation. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST AB 43, as introduced, Mark Stone. Personal income tax: credit: earned income. The Personal Income Tax Law authorizes various credits against the taxes imposed by that law. The federal Internal Revenue Code authorizes a refundable earned income tax credit for certain low-income individuals who have earned income and who meet certain other requirements. This bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would create an refundable earned income tax credit for low-income individuals working in California. The bill would also make findings and declarations in this regard. Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no. State-mandated local program: no. THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following: (1) In its Supplemental Poverty Measure report for the year 2013, released in October 2014, the United States Census Bureau reported California's rate of poverty to be 23.4 percent. This rate is the highest among all 50 states. (2) Using census data released in September 2014, the California Budget Project (CBP) reported that the economic recovery from the Great Recession has largely bypassed low-and middle-income Californians, with the bottom three-fifths of the income distribution experiencing stagnating income gains. This is contrasted with the top one-fifth of the income distribution experiencing gains of 52.4 percent. (3) A briefing on poverty released by the CBP in August 2014 reports that 67 percent of families living in poverty were supported by one or more workers in 2012. Given that the majority of families living in poverty are working families in California, it is evident that poverty largely reflects low-paying jobs, not the absence of employment. (4) In California, the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC), in collaboration with the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality, has developed the California Poverty Measure (CPM), which underscores the role of California's social safety net, amount which includes the CalFresh Program, CalWORKs, and the federal Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), in mitigating poverty. (5) Using data from 2011, a PPIC report on the CPM released in October 2013, reveals that 22 percent of Californians, 8.1 million people, lived in poverty. A comparison of CPM rates by county show that the three most populous counties, Los Angeles County, San Diego County, and Orange County, all had rates above the statewide CPM at 26.9 percent, 22.7 percent, and 24.3 percent, respectively. (6) The CPM rate for children statewide for children, those under the age of 18, was 25.1 percent, the highest rate of any age group. This amounts to 2.3 million of California's children living in poverty. (7) Without need-based safety net programs and resources, over 30 percent of Californians would be living in poverty. The absence of the safety net would increase the poverty rate among California's children to 39 percent according to the CPM. (8) Refundable tax credits, including the federal EITC, reduced the poverty rate in California by 3.2 percent overall. Among children, the poverty rate reduction was 6 percent. This means that 560,000 fewer children and 600,000 fewer working-age adults, 1.16 million people fewer in total, are living in poverty when refundable tax credits are accounted for in the CPM. (9) According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 25 states in the country and the District of Columbia, provide an EITC in addition to the federal EITC. California does not currently have a state EITC. (10) A Brookings Institution report issued in January 2003, shows that in addition to boosting the family incomes of families in poverty, state EITC refunds served as an important economic stimulus for the communities and regions of the families by magnifying the impact of the federal EITC overall. (b) Based on these findings and declarations, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would create an refundable earned income tax credit for low-income individuals working in California.