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A comprehensive literature review of the impact of child tax credit/child allowance in the United States and South Korea

Hyeri Choi (School of Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA)
Jiwan Lee (Columbia University School of Social Work, New York, New York, USA)

International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy

ISSN: 0144-333X

Article publication date: 27 June 2023

Issue publication date: 25 October 2023

196

Abstract

Purpose

The America Rescue Plan (ARP) transformed the Child Tax Credit (CTC) into a more generous, inclusive monthly payment from July through December 2021. However, the expansion has been terminated and the annual CTC has been reinstated. The United States is one of the few OECD countries that do not have a child allowance system and South Korea has recently adopted child allowance in 2018. This study aims to comprehensively review the existing literature and evidence on ARP-CTC in the United States and Universal Child Allowance (CA) in Korea.

Design/methodology/approach

The researchers completed a database search between July 1, 2022 and July 20, 2022. For the United States, the search keywords were child tax credit OR expanded child tax credit OR CTC OR child allowance. For Korea, the search keyword was child allowance. Searches were conducted using 79 databases. A total of 36 US studies and 7 Korean studies met all the inclusion criteria and proceeded to the extraction process. A narrative thematic synthesis approach was employed to identify themes in the findings. The results were organized based on the characteristics of the studies and the post-intervention outcomes.

Findings

Studies in the United States focused primarily on economic outcomes, including poverty and material hardship, reflecting the concern policymakers and researchers have about child poverty. On the other hand, Korean studies examined employment, economic well-being, psychological well-being and expenditures in a relatively balanced share. Overall, studies found that both ARP-Child Tax Credits and Universal Child Allowance reduced child poverty and improved material hardship. Also, studies in both countries suggested that both policies had positive impacts on parental psychological well-being.

Originality/value

To the authors knowledge, this paper is the first to comprehensively review the impact of the US ARP-CTC in comparison with the Korean child allowance. Two studies reviewed and updated the literature on US ARP-CTC as a round-up paper. Moreover, the authors conduct cross-national comparative analyses between the United States and Korea. The contexts of the child allowance system in the two nations have both similarities and differences, thereby offering a unique opportunity for a comparative study.

Keywords

Citation

Choi, H. and Lee, J. (2023), "A comprehensive literature review of the impact of child tax credit/child allowance in the United States and South Korea", International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, Vol. 43 No. 11/12, pp. 1257-1278. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSSP-03-2023-0064

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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