April 26, 2017 | Journal Article
  • Intro Text: Current research links individual-level health improvements to the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), a broad-based income support policy. Jeannette Wicks-Lim and Peter Arno expand upon this research by examining whether the EITC has ecological neighborhood-level health effects as well. In their new study, they measure child health outcomes in New York State neighborhoods before and after the EITC policy expansion between 1997-2010.  Their findings link a 15 percentage-point increase in EITC benefit rates to a .45 percentage-point reduction in low birth weight rate. The magnitude of this link suggests ecological effects, and an additional channel through which anti-poverty measures can serve as public health interventions.
  • Type of publication: Journal Article
  • Research or In The Media: Research
  • Research Area: Health Policy
  • Publication Date: 2017-04-26
  • Authors:
    • Add Authors: Jeannette Wicks-Lim
    • Add Authors: Peter Arno
  • Show in Front Page Modules: Yes
Improving Population Health by Reducing Poverty: New York's Earned Income Tax Credit

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Abstract

Despite the established relationship between adverse health outcomes and low socioeconomic status, researchers rarely test the link between health improvements and poverty-alleviating economic policies. New research, however, links individual-level health improvements to the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), a broad-based income support policy. We build on these findings by examining whether the EITC has ecological, neighborhood-level health effects. We use a difference-in-difference analysis to measure child health outcomes in 90 low- and middle- income neighborhoods before and after the expansion of New York State and New York City’s EITC policy between 1997-2010. Our study takes advantage of the relatively exogenous source of income variation supplied by the EITC—legislative changes to EITC policy parameters. This feature minimizes the endogeneity problem in studying the relationship between income and health. Our estimates link a 15-percentage-point increase in EITC benefit rates to a 0.45 percentage-point reduction in the low birthweight rate. We do not observe any measurable link between EITC benefits and prenatal health or asthma-related pediatric hospitalization. The magnitude of the EITC’s impact on low birthweight rates suggests ecological effects, and an additional channel through which anti-poverty measures can serve as public health interventions.

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