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Katherine Gallagher Robbins, Senior Policy Analyst

Katherine Gallagher Robbins

Katherine Gallagher Robbins is a Senior Policy Analyst for Family Economic Security at the National Women’s Law Center where she examines how tax and budget policies influence the financial stability and security of low-income women and families.  Before joining the Center in 2010, Ms. Gallagher Robbins worked as an organizer for the California Public Interest Research Group at the University of California, San Diego. She is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and a graduate of the College of William and Mary.

My Take

Grim Poverty Data Show Need for Fair and Responsible Tax Policies

Posted by Katherine Gallagher Robbins, Senior Policy Analyst | Posted on: October 05, 2010 at 10:34 am

NWLC's analyses of recently released Census data nationally and by state underscore the bleak situation of America’s women and families:

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State Poverty Numbers Reveal Bleak Situation for Single Moms and their Families

Posted by Katherine Gallagher Robbins, Senior Policy Analyst | Posted on: September 28, 2010 at 03:54 pm

NWLC’s calculations  of just released state-by-state Census data reveal more grim news about the hard times facing America’s women and families.

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Catching Up With Single Mothers

Posted by Katherine Gallagher Robbins, Senior Policy Analyst | Posted on: July 27, 2010 at 03:07 pm

In today's NY Times Bob Herbert highlights the increasing economic anxiety American families are facing.

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Take 2: Deficits Are No Problem If the Issue Is Tax Cuts for Heirs of Multimillionaires

Posted by Katherine Gallagher Robbins, Senior Policy Analyst | Posted on: July 15, 2010 at 07:20 pm

by Katherine Gallagher Robbins, Senior Policy Analyst, 
National Women's Law Center

While the heirs of billionaires like George Steinbrenner are lucking out in 2010, struggling Americans cannot catch a break. Up to 2.5 million workers may lose unemployment benefits by the end of this week.  Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) cited the deficit as a key reason for not extending these benefits saying, "The only reason the unemployment extension hasn't passed is because our friends on the other side have refused to pass a bill that doesn't add to the debt."

So, when Senator Jon Kyl (R-AZ) (who voted to block the extension of UI benefits and is supporting other costly tax cuts for millionaires) and Senator Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) announced that they would try to get Congress to act this month on a measure reducing the estate tax next year for the heirs of the very rich, we wondered what the effect on the deficit would be.

Because Congress allowed the estate tax to expire at the beginning of the year, the heirs of the very wealthy get an additional windfall in the form of $14.8 billion in tax savings that would otherwise have gone to the U.S. Treasury. (The estate tax returns to its pre-Bush tax cut level on January 1, 2011.) In comparing how extending unemployment benefits and prominent estate tax proposals would affect the deficit over the next decade, Ezra Klein shows that extending unemployment benefits would be a drop in the deficit bucket while various proposals regarding the estate tax would set America back by hundreds of billions of dollars.

Deficit_change

This graph is from Ezra Klein's Blog in the Washington Post. To read the full article, click here.

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