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Child poverty was driven to an unprecedented low last year, thanks in part to a bigger-than-ever child tax credit. As U.S. lawmakers enter their lame-duck session, they’ll have to decide whether to permanently expand the credits, which dropped back to pre-pandemic levels this year. Advocates for children say doing so could keep more than half a million Michigan kids out of poverty.

“The success of the 2021 Child Tax Credit expansion showed us that high child poverty rates are a policy choice, not an inevitability,” wrote Chuck Marr, vice president for federal tax policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. “The choice before Congress this year is simple: They can act, or they can see millions of children fall back into poverty.”

Read more at Battle Creek Enquirer.