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1 posted on 09/15/2016 8:36:20 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

This is awesome though:

“The first part of my childcare plan allows every parent or family in
America — including adoptive parents and foster parent guardians — to
deduct their childcare expenses from their income taxes.”

Trump is to allow “every parent in America to open up a Dependent Care Savings Account. Families can contribute up to $2,000 a year to these accounts completely tax-free.”

Less Taxes.


2 posted on 09/15/2016 8:37:51 AM PDT by VitacoreVision
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

A publication like the Economist should know better - it’s the taxpayers who subsidize the giveaways, not the politicians.


3 posted on 09/15/2016 8:39:10 AM PDT by MichaelCorleone (Jesus Christ is not a religion. He's the Truth.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

I am fine with less taxes.

I have problems with tax credits.


4 posted on 09/15/2016 8:41:58 AM PDT by ConservativeMind ("Humane" = "Don't pen up pets or eat meat, but allow infanticides, abortion, and euthanasia.")
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Society has changed.

It has encouraged most women to work outside the home, and for most women that is their preference.

Trump must move in this direction (recognize need for accommodation to motherhood), or we lose again.

Plus, look at our birthrate. We need to reverse the decline.


5 posted on 09/15/2016 8:42:26 AM PDT by cicero2k
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Trump position: No abortion, save the children and families...

Clinton position: Planned Parenthood needs to be heavily funded, reduce family size, have women working instead of home taking care of home and family...


7 posted on 09/15/2016 8:46:40 AM PDT by HarleyLady27 ('THE FORCE AWAKENS!!!' Trump/Pence; Trump/Pence; Trump/Pence 100%)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Why subsidize anything? Why should I have to make up the difference for someone else having kids? I’m @#_&@# tired of paying for everyone else.

Why farm out your children to strangers to raise? Tighten the belt and have one parent stay home to raise the kids properly. Oh, yeah, because daddy isn’t in the picture and mama doesn’t have enough self respect or responsibility to keep her legs together.

In past generations, grandma babysat. Today’s generation doesn’t want grandma around but they’ll take from everyone else.


10 posted on 09/15/2016 8:49:20 AM PDT by bgill (From the CDC site, "We don't know how people are infected with Ebola")
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Child Care Reforms That Will Make America Great Again

Fact Sheet for Donald J. Trump’s New Child Care Plan: Click Here

Current Policies Hold Families Back

Over the past 40 years, the labor force participation of women with children under 18 has grown from 47 percent in 1975 to 70 percent today. Raising a child is now the single greatest expense for most American families—even exceeding the cost of housing in much of the country. Almost two-thirds (64 percent) of mothers with children under 6 are working outside of the home.

Government policies are stuck in the past, and make already difficult choices regarding care arrangements even more difficult. Outdated policies in many cases cause women to make choices that are not the best for either their families or the economy.

Today’s workforce includes 73.5 million women representing 47 percent of the entire US labor force. Over 24 million of those women have children under age 18; almost 10 million of them have children under age 6. Women are the primary breadwinners in 40 percent of American households with children under the age of 18, but hold 62 percent of minimum wage jobs. The number of families headed by single mothers has doubled in the last 30 years; about two-thirds of these mothers work in “dead-end, poorly compensated jobs without flexibility or benefits.” Government policies must be especially helpful for these women.

Current federal policies regarding child and dependent care do not reflect either the needs of American families or the contributions of women to the American workforce. The high cost of quality care burdens working families while the tax code provides disincentives for women to reenter or enter the workforce.

Our plan will transform child and dependent care to meet the needs of 21st century families, empowering parents—not bureaucrats.

The Trump Plan Will Empower Parents and Achieve the Following Goals:

1. Help every family with the costs of childcare and eldercare.
2. Empower families to choose the care that is right for their family.
3. Create a new, dynamic market for family-based and community-based solutions.
4. Incentivize employers to provide childcare at the workplace.
5. Provide 6 weeks of paid leave to new mothers before returning to work.

Details of Donald J. Trump’s Plan for Child and Dependent Care:

Exclude the costs of child and elder care from tax

In a world where almost two-thirds of mothers with children under age 6 are employed, the cost of childcare is an unavoidable family expense. In business, other such expenditures are tax-deductible, but they are not for families. The Trump plan will exclude childcare costs from the income tax from birth to age 13, the period where children need supervised care, and will include adoptive parents as well as foster parents who are legal guardians of the child. The exclusion (also known as an above-the-line deduction) will cover up to 4 children per family.

The exclusion would apply to a variety of different kinds of childcare—institutional, private, nursery school, afterschool care, and enrichment activities—affording choice to parents. The deduction would be limited to the average cost of childcare in the state of residence for the age of the child.

Importantly, the benefit would be provided to families who use stay-at-home parents or grandparents as well as those who use paid caregivers. This would level the playing field for parents when it comes to determining what’s in a family’s best interest. It would also be a belated recognition by the federal government of the economic value of the work provided by stay-at-home parents.

Similarly, the Trump plan would also allow an above-the-line deduction for eldercare costs necessary to keep a family member working outside the home. It would apply to costs like home care or adult day care costs for elderly dependents when those expenses are needed to keeping family members in the workforce. The deduction would be limited to $5,000 per year.

While an above-the-line deduction is a significant tax benefit, it may not provide sufficient relief to the lowest-earning taxpayers. To get real benefits to lower-income taxpayers who can’t use the exclusion against the income tax because they have no income tax liability, the Trump plan would also provide them a boost in the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC). This boost would be half of the payroll taxes paid by the lower earning parent, and would be subject to an income limitation of $31,200.

For a parent making $15 per hour at a full-time job, the EITC boost in the Trump plan could mean as much as $1,200 extra per year. Importantly, when parents fill out their taxes they can check a box to directly deposit any portion of their EITC into their childcare savings account (discussed in more detail below). This will encourage saving, and make it easier for low-income parents to receive their federal match.

Allowing every family, whether they take the standard or itemized deduction, to deduct childcare expenses from tax will help get the incentives right for women who opt to work outside the home. The current tax code discourages their work.

The tax code combines the income of both spouses in a family when determining the marginal tax rate, so the additional income earned by a mother who returns to the workforce is taxed at the highest rate that applies to the family. The above-the-line deduction for child and elder care mitigates this effect.

Experts agree that childcare is properly expensed to ameliorate the effects of a tax code written over 65 years ago for a workforce that no longer exists. Dual-earner families were not prevalent in 1949 when the current tax regime for families was put in place. Today, however, almost two-thirds of married couples are dual-earners, more than twice the number of single-earner married couples.

As AEI economist Alan Viard put it, “Under basic tax policy principles, workers should be allowed to deduct the expenses of earning the income on which they are taxed. Child care meets the economic definition of a work-related expense — parents are less likely to work when child care becomes more expensive....Families should be free to make their own child care choices, based on the options available to them, their understanding of their children’s needs, and their moral values, without interference from the tax system.”

Changes in the family, workforce, and the large proportion of women who work outside the home require us to fix the broken tax code. Excluding the costs of childcare from taxation will help every family with the costs of child and dependent care. The Trump plan will promote strong families and grow the workforce, which will increase productivity and spur economic growth. Most importantly, it will provide families real choice in making decisions about how to provide care for their loved ones.

Create Child Care Savings Accounts

After finding the right care for their circumstances, families should also have an option to set aside extra money to further foster their child’s development. The Trump plan will provide Americans the option of opening dependent care savings accounts (DCSAs) so that they can plan for future expenses relating to child and elder care.

Annual contributions to a dependent care savings account and earnings on the account will not be subject to tax. Immediate family members and employers will also be able to set aside funds in these accounts, which will be established for the benefit of specific individuals, including unborn children. Total contributions could not exceed $2,000 per year from all sources, but balances in a DCSA will rollover from year-to-year so that substantial amounts could be accumulated over a period of years.

When established for a child, parents can use the accumulated funds to enroll their kids in a school of their choice or for other enrichment activities that prepare them for their future. Funds remaining in the account when the child reaches 18 can be used for higher education expenses. To encourage low-income families to establish DCSAs for their children, the government will provide a 50 percent match on parental contributions of up to $1,000 per year. That’s an extra $500 per child for families that qualify. This will encourage savings, and position families to be better able to withstand the unexpected costs of childrearing.

When established for an elderly dependent, the funds can be used for adult day care, in-home or long-term care services. The ability to set aside funds tax-free would be particularly helpful to women, low-income workers and minorities, who are typically primary care providers that reduce paid time worked in order to provide care. The ability to set aside funds for elder care is critically important because taking time off from working to care for elderly family members reduces a woman’s financial readiness for retirement, and can increase a woman’s risk of living in poverty in old age.

The flexibility and security provided by the dependent care savings account under the Trump plan will be of great benefit to all who participate, enabling them to save tax-free for the expected costs of family life. Additionally, this will help increase the low US savings rate (currently 5.7 percent), where 47 percent of Americans cannot meet an unexpected expense of $400 without resorting to borrowing or selling personal property.

Create a new, dynamic market for family-based and community-based solutions

Finding quality childcare is a challenge, particularly in low-income and rural communities. The Trump plan will reduce regulations that disproportionately favor center-based care to create a new, dynamic market for family-based and community-based solutions. Families will be given the power and information to choose who will be providing care and where that care will be provided without fear of loss of government benefits. The marketplace will be free to develop alternatives that provide care where needed, and at the times when people who work irregular hours need care.

Current federal efforts to reduce childcare costs, such as the pre-tax flexible spending accounts available to many workers, are biased toward center-based care. The lack of choice limits options for people who work irregular hours and those who live in rural communities where choices for center-based care are not available nearby. Federal regulations already in the pipeline likely will limit choices further. Devolving regulatory authority to the states to set guidelines appropriate to the needs of its residents for items like staffing and facility size would be a priority in the Trump administration.

As the Independent Women’s Forum put it in a recent report: “Analysts have found that day-care regulations, particularly related to child-to-staff ratios, are costly and fail to improve the quality of care received by the children. Moreover, they may be counterproductive since they require day-care providers to focus on quantity of caregivers, rather than the quality of those professionals. State policymakers should relax staff size regulations so that day-care centers can reallocate funds to other priorities, such as attracting and retaining more highly-skilled workers, and reducing prices for parents.”

In addition, informal networks of friends and relatives are an important source of childcare that is convenient and trusted. These flexible arrangements can also help meet the need for care during nontraditional hours. Moms helping moms and grandparents caring for children should be facilitated not discouraged. The costs of such care will be excluded from tax under the Trump plan if allowed by the state.

Reducing regulations to allow the market to work will result in innovative solutions that meet the particular circumstances faced by families in the communities where they live. Such solutions will not be arrived at through Washington bureaucracy and a one-size-fits-all solution.

Incentivize employers to provide childcare at the workplace

The 2014 National Survey of Employers found that only 7 percent of employers offered childcare at or near the worksite. The Trump plan will incentivize employers to provide childcare at the workplace by making the existing tax credit for employer-based childcare facilities more effective, and will allow the same income tax exclusion allowed to individuals to businesses that contribute to an employees’ cost of childcare.

Legislation enacted in 2001 included a bipartisan incentive for on-site childcare. That law gave companies that provide appropriately-licensed on-site childcare centers a tax credit of up to 25 percent of facility expenditures, plus 10 percent of resource and referral costs, up to a limit of $150,000 per calendar year; a portion of the credit is recaptured if the center is kept in service for less than 10 tax years. The Trump plan would increase the cap, shorten the recapture period, and devise ways for companies to pool resources in order to make the credit more attractive.

Because breakdowns in employee childcare networks of care cost U.S. businesses $4.4 billion annually as a consequence of avoidable employee absenteeism, both businesses and families will benefit from the increased availability of convenient, reliable, care. On-site child care centers save employees time—as much as 30 minutes per morning—which will ultimately be to the employers’ benefit as parents are more productive knowing that their children are accessible to them in case of an emergency. Such facilities could also provide back-up or emergency care for employees with family-based or in-home care.

Further, allowing businesses the same exclusion from income for their contributions to their employees’ childcare will give businesses the opportunity to provide a benefit that helps their employees remain in the workforce. This may be particularly attractive to small businesses that are unable to provide worksite care and take full advantage of the tax credit for on-site childcare centers.

Enabling businesses to make it more convenient for parents with children to work makes good business sense, and helps all working women.

Provide 6 weeks of maternity leave to new mothers

The United States is the only developed country that does not provide cash benefits for new mothers. According to the U.S. Department of Labor: “Only 12 percent of U.S. private sector workers have access to paid family leave through their employer”. Each year, 1.4 million women who work give birth without any paid leave from their employer.

The Trump plan will enhance Unemployment Insurance (UI) to include 6 weeks of paid leave for new mothers so that they can take time off of work after having a baby. This would triple the average 2 weeks of paid leave received by new mothers, which will benefit both the mother and the child.

Providing a temporary unemployment benefit for eight weeks through the UI system would cost $2.5 billion annually at an average benefit of $300 per week. This cost could be offset through changes in the existing UI system, such as by reducing the $5.6 billion per year in improper payments or implementing the proposals included in the administration’s FY 2017 budget regarding program integrity. Providing the benefit through UI—paid for through program savings—will not be financially onerous to small businesses when compared with mandating paid leave.

An analysis of a similar program in California has shown that unmarried, nonwhite, and non-college educated mothers receive the most benefit. The Trump plan for paid maternity leave will advance the interests of disadvantaged mothers without raising taxes.

The Trump plan promotes economic freedom for women

Families make decisions about whether to work outside of the home or not based on the cost and availability of child and elder care. Many women stop paid work to provide care because other options are not readily available. This often limits their careers, and is fundamental to the wage disparities that women face. As noted above, in 2014, single women without children made 94 cents on a man’s dollar, but married mothers with children under 18 made only 81 cents.

A one-size-fits-all solution ignores the reality of today’s modern family dynamics. It is essential to empower women who choose to work outside the home to do so, without penalty, while also supporting women who make the important choice to work inside the home, caring for their families.

Child and elder care policies proposed under the Trump Plan will foster economic and family growth. Policies like paid maternity leave, treating childcare like a business expense, and enabling innovative care models will keep women in the workforce if that is what she chooses. Retaining women in the workforce is essential, not just for the woman’s benefit but for that of her family, her employer, her community and her country—helping to Make America Great Again.


20 posted on 09/15/2016 9:15:17 AM PDT by HarleyLady27 ('THE FORCE AWAKENS!!!' Trump/Pence; Trump/Pence; Trump/Pence 100%)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Who will win the Bidding War?


21 posted on 09/15/2016 9:17:56 AM PDT by Uncle Miltie (This posting is a microaggression.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

How about we stop using tax policy for social engineering?
That has resulted in giving out “refunds” of money that was never paid in in the first place. Yes I know that financial incentives work, however, I would argue that it is another one of those things that the federal government has no business doing. If it’s needed it is up to the States. Challenge the underlying premise!


27 posted on 09/15/2016 9:33:33 AM PDT by mistfree (It's a very uncreative man who can't think of more than one way to spell a word.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Simplify the tax code and lower the rates across the board. Making a ridiculously complicated tax code even more convoluted will help nobody, and sounds like typical election year pandering.

Everyone should recognize the benefit of having a parent with their children as much as possible. Nobody should be rewarded or punished by politicians for making this decision.

Americans waste far too much time and money attempting to comply with an ever expanding, and always confusing tax policy. Why make it worse? Let Americans keep more of their money (and time) and they will figure out what is best for their children without any help from DC. Liberty is an awesome thing.


29 posted on 09/15/2016 9:46:09 AM PDT by Kandy Atz ("Were we directed from Washington when to sow and when to reap, we should soon want for bread.")
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To: E. Pluribus Unum; BlackElk

The Trump plan, from what I can tell, is really an increase in the per-child tax dependent deduction that never kept up with inflation in the first place. It is ingeniously marketed as a “child care credit” which sounds great to the “suburban bimbos from hell” group (h/t blackelk) which is Trump’s weakest group.


37 posted on 09/15/2016 11:00:38 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana (There is no salvation in politics.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Trump has it right!


52 posted on 09/15/2016 3:44:21 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

We can’t be for government taking from one to give to someone else when it happens to be something we agree with. Trump needs to be convinced that this is wrong, that it smacks of vote buying and it is anti-productive and anti conservative


58 posted on 09/16/2016 5:13:32 AM PDT by waverna
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
Clinton would subsidise child care; Trump would subsidise parenthood

What the hell business does Fed.gov have subsidizing either one?

Where does the Constitution grant either the Congress or the President to subsidize "child care" or "parenthood"???

It doesn't, of course. This is:

1) Just another blatant seizure of power in utter defiance of constitutional limits on the size, scope, and power of government.

2) Yet another example of spending money we don't have on things we don't need. All "we" are building with this is a mountain of debt.

3) More redistribution of wealth. It's always a little better when you spread the wealth around. So saith Barack 0bama. And Karl Marx.

66 posted on 09/16/2016 10:28:49 AM PDT by NorthMountain (Hillary Clinton: corrupt unreliable negligent traitor)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Am I the only one who thinks young humans need to be with their loving parent to achieve their potential as good human beings? Why does every other mammal care for their OWN* young? Who loves a child more than their parents? Don’t we understand the child knows this?

We had the same world once, and enough women didn’t work that men earned enough to pay for the whole family. Why can’t there be understanding NOW that lets all women work who wish to, but where stay with children parenting is even slightly VALUED?

I think this is all a big mistake. I think companies should be exhorted to hire ex-mommies just like they do veterans. Amazing multitaskers who defer gratification and aren’t getting high in the parking lot. We need to let women stay home with the kids, and give them credit later for all those hard years of unpaid labor. Moms are not heroes like vets, but they too should be hired, because they too have had lots of life training that shouldn’t lock them out of the workforce forever.

*one small example: bats. They will give birth in groups of even 100 bats, in a cave, barn, wherever. The moms will leave the little baby bats at home and go forage for food, come back and feed the babies their milk. In that group of 100 pink baby mewling bats, each mother knows her bat’s cry and smell. What are we doing, pushing other care for our children without the sense bats have? Of course when you need to work, you need child care, but these policies are greater than that: they are insisting all women ARE SUPPOSED TO abandon their kids all day. And that is turning away from both nature and love.


71 posted on 09/16/2016 10:42:53 AM PDT by Yaelle
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

I would increase the per-child tax deduction.

Don’t pay any taxes? Well, perhaps the US would be a better place if you didn’t have a bunch of kids.


86 posted on 09/16/2016 2:14:57 PM PDT by PapaBear3625 (Big government is attractive to those who think that THEY will be in control of it.)
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