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How a New ‘Baby Bonds’ Proposal to Give Every Child $1,000 at Birth Would Work

- Eddie Lee / Money; Getty Images
Eddie Lee / Money; Getty Images

Some lawmakers want to give a $1,000 gift to every family that welcomes a baby.

A proposal that would give every American child $1,000 at birth — plus additional yearly payments for lower-income families — is once again gaining attention after progressive lawmakers recently reintroduced a bill in the House of Representatives and the Senate.

How 'baby bonds' would work

The proposal is commonly referred to as “baby bonds,” though the legislation is officially titled the American Opportunity Accounts Act. The act was introduced into the House and Senate last week by Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass and Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J.

“Baby Bonds are one of the most effective tools we have for closing the racial wealth gap and breaking the cycles of poverty and trauma that have prevented Black and brown folks from thriving in this country,” Rep. Pressley said in an announcement of the proposal, “so it is no surprise that this idea has gained traction in states across the country.”

Sen. Booker first introduced the proposal in 2018, then again with Rep. Pressley in 2021, kickstarting a wave of interest at a state and local level.

What the research says

The American Opportunity Accounts Act is aimed at reducing the racial wealth gap, though the initial $1,000 would be universal and the supplemental deposits each year would based on income levels — not race.

While every child would qualify for an initial $1,000 at birth, the baby bond program would address the racial wealth gap by providing supplemental payments each year to financially needy families, up to $2,000.

“Because of the racialized nature of wealth distribution in the US, targeting resources toward children from households with the least resources disproportionately benefits children from Black, Latinx and Indigenous households,” according to a report by Shira Markoff, a policy fellow at the pro-baby bond advocacy group Prosperity Now.

Democrats in favor of the baby bond accounts also say the program would pay for itself “by making common sense reforms to federal estate and inheritance taxes, including restoring the estate tax to 2009 levels.”

That claim is buttressed by a budget analysis from the fiscally conservative Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB).

Keep in mind

The American Opportunity Accounts Act would be a massive overhaul of our tax and social safety net programs, and the proposal is not likely to become law during this Congressional session due to a Republican majority in the House of Representatives.

Some Republican representatives do want major tax reform. However, they're far apart on the minutiae. Take the recently proposed Fair Tax Act. The proposal aims to abolish the IRS entirely, get rid of all current federal taxes and establish an estimated 30% nationwide sales tax — a move that the left-leaning Brookings Institution expects would increase the tax burden on the bottom 90% of earners.

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