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The ARPA CTC amount is a scale parameter that by default goes up to 17, so the normal CTC should not be necessary. However, when not setting the normal CTC amount, a we observe an excessively high impact of ARPA on a household with a 17-year-old child. In the income range where they would receive the non-refundable ODC, ARPA should provide them $2,500; however, it is instead $3,000: Setting the age maximum fixes this: Adding a 10-year-old child to the household produces these: The base age change correctly gets the higher-income household a benefit since they'd be eligible for the normal 17yo CTC. More calculations in this notebook. So some thoughts on where the bug could be:
After a deep session with Claude, it suggested: After reviewing the existing tests, I can suggest some additional tests to cover more scenarios and edge cases. Here are some new test cases we could add:
These additional tests cover various scenarios including the age extension, interactions between regular CTC and ARPA additions, phase-out thresholds, and multiple children scenarios. They should help ensure that the CTC calculations are correct across different family compositions and income levels, especially with the age extension in place. |
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Confirmed that the issue is that, without setting the base CTC age limit, 17-year-olds qualify for both the ODC and ARPA CTC. Filed #4903 to address. |
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With the ECPS in 2025, we project that:
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