In the mid-1950s, Jessica Fulton's grandparents moved from Mississippi to southern Illinois, where they built a new life for their family, she said at a tax policy event earlier this month.
"They created a community," said Fulton, the vice president for policy of the
Fulton spoke as part of a program featuring
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For Black and Hispanic Americans,
In fact, one panelist suggested that the doubled standard deduction
"The disparities are just this function of not just inequality in homeownership, but also income inequality. And it's important to keep in mind that — even among households with the same income — homeownership rates are considerably lower for minority households, if you look throughout the income distribution," Neil Bhutta, a special advisor to the Philadelphia Fed's
While he noted that he's "not really a tax person" and called the persistent homeownership gaps "even within income" a puzzling problem, Bhutta said it would be difficult to imagine "being able to keep the home mortgage deduction and make it more equitable, without broader changes to the tax code and the standard deduction and things like that."
The panelists spoke the same day that
"Although the average benefit will rise for all groups, the relative disparities will not change substantially," they wrote. "A surprising result is that, in the top income group, Black taxpayers receive a disproportionately larger benefit relative to white taxpayers under TCJA, but that relationship will be reversed after the expiration of the individual income tax provisions."
Regardless, the study added to a long paper trail documenting the links between the
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"If you actually are able to benefit from the home mortgage interest deduction, then you're likely to be one who's able to take advantage of the things that it brings," Derrick Plummer, the director of corporate communications for online filing software firm TurboTax parent Intuit, said on the panel. "But if you are not a homeowner, if you can't even get into homeownership, let alone be able to stay in homeownership, that might not necessarily be the case. What we also know is that our tax code is extremely complicated — more than 6,000 pages long. And what we also recognize is that
The panelists and speakers shared other tax incentives they argued may help more Americans build wealth than the mortgage interest deduction. At its root, the main issue revolves around the goal of accumulating wealth, according to Kamila Sommer, the chief of the Consumer Finance Section of the
"It is not obvious to me that we have to have explicit policies targeting, promoting homeownership," Sommer said, noting that the higher standard deduction under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act boosted renters' incomes. "It does increase their savings rate and allows them to get into homeownership or accelerate or aid the transition into homeownership. The mortgage interest rate deduction — just generally how I perceive it — is that it tends to benefit existing homeowners. And it's very well-liked, but you can have policies which help people to increase household income and help them achieve homeownership through saving and ability to qualify for mortgages."
Tax credits for buying or building homes could hike up the share of households able to afford a home as well, according to Michael Neal, a senior fellow at the
"Certainly, the tax credit — at least the way that I read the literature — can have a relatively more powerful impact among those that have lower incomes," Neal said. "When we think about housing supply, we are thinking about small builders, and the degree to which tax policy can certainly help to change their calculus. That could also have implications in terms of their ability to bring more affordable housing stock to market."
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The expanded child tax credit — a pandemic-era policy that has since lapsed and
"It lowered child poverty for Black children, but it also put money in the pockets of people across race and ethnicity, and kept our economy running — like it helps people to put food on the table," Fulton said. "I am a firm believer that if we can be really thoughtful about how we design more inclusive policies — what is it, 'The rising tide lifts all boats' — it's almost like it brings all of us. So that's been really exciting to see."