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Top 10 Counties by Share of Taxpayers Claiming EITC

Ben Harris presents data on “Variation in EITC Take-up, County by County.” The Earned Income Tax Credit, a tax credit for low- and moderate-income workers, is, according to Harris, “one of our nation’s most effective anti-poverty policies, bringing 10.1 million families out of poverty in 2012.”

Harris, a fellow in Economic Studies and policy director of The Hamilton Project, uses IRS data from 2007 to show “notable variation across counties in EITC take-up.” The “median county sees 16.2 percent of taxpayers claiming the EITC.” He describes the regional variation as “stark”:

The counties with the highest share of taxpayers taking up the EITC are overwhelming located in the Southeast. As can be seen in the accompanying map, a large share of counties in Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi have over half of their taxpayers claiming the EITC. With few exceptions, almost all counties with high rates of EITC take-up are located in the South. Relative to the South, the Northeast and the Midwest have much lower rates of EITC take-up. Moreover, average EITC benefit closely follows the pattern for share of taxpayers taking up the credit.
 

The ten counties with the highest share of taxpayers claiming EITC are listed below. Populations are 2012 estimates from the Census Bureau. The counties are shown in yellow on the maps, and are derived from the EITC interactive map, where you can also get county-level average EITC amounts.

 

10. Sunflower Co., MS

 

EITC Share: 46.8%

Pop.: 28,431

County Seat: Indianola

 

The B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center is located in Indianola.

 

 

eitc_sunflower_co

 

 

9. Sioux Co., ND

 

EITC Share: 47.1%

Pop.: 4,347

County Seat: Fort Yates

 

The Standing Rock Sioux Reservation encompasses this county entirely.

 

eitc_sioux_co
 

8. Hudspeth Co., TX

 

EITC Share: 47.4%

Pop.: 3,337

County Seat: Sierra Blanca

 

In 1880, Apaches killed seven “Buffalo Soldiers” of the Tenth U.S. Cavalry here.

 

eitc_hudspeth_co
 

7. Zavala Co., TX

 

EITC Share: 47.9%

Pop.: 11,961

County Seat: Crystal City

 

The county is named for Lorenzo de Zavala (1788-1836), a Mexican politician who signed the Texas Declaration of Independence in 1836 and briefly served as vice president of the interim government.

 

eitc_zavala_co
 

6. Tunica Co., MS

 

EITC Share: 48.0%

Pop.: 10,475

County Seat: Tunica

 

According to the American Gaming Association, Tunica and environs host the nation’s 10th largest casino market by annual revenue (2012).

 

eitc_tunica_co
 

5. Starr Co., TX

 

EITC Share: 48.9%

Pop.: 61,615

County Seat: Rio Grande City

 

In 1988, voters in Starr County gave Michael Dukakis 84.7% of their vote, the Democratic candidate’s highest county total (Zavala Co. was second). In 2012, President Obama won 86.4% of the vote there.

 

eitc_starr_co
 

4. Claiborne Co., MS

 

EITC Share: 49.6%

Pop.: 9.349

County Seat: Port Gibson

 

Port Gibson is home to the oldest surviving synagogue in the state, Temple Gemiluth Chassed, built in 1892. The now-vanished Jewish congregation was founded by Ashkenazi immigrants from Alsace-Lorraine.

 

eitc_claiborne_co
 

3. Todd Co., SD

 

EITC Share: 52.5%

Pop.: 9,942

County Seat: none

 

The county lies entirely in the Rosebud Indian Reservation, where live the Sicangu Lakota, or Rosebud Sioux.

 

eitc_todd_co
 

2. Shannon Co., SD

 

EITC Share: 52.9%

Pop.: 14,059

County Seat: none

 

Like Todd Co., Shannon Co. is located entirely within an Indian reservation, Pine Ridge. On December 29, 1890, members of the U.S. 7th Cavalry killed over 300 men, women and children in what has become known as the Wounded Knee Massacre.

 

eitc_shannon_co
 

1. Buffalo Co., SD

 

EITC Share: 59.7%

Pop.: 2,020

County Seat: Gann Valley

 

The Fort Thompson Mounds are located on the Crow Creek Indian Reservation here, and show evidence of the first pottery-making peoples in the area. The mounds date from ca. 800.

 

eitc_buffalo_co

Get more research on the EITC on our topic page and also from the Metropolitan Policy Program.

 

N.b.: EITC data are from Ben Harris; information about the counties are from the blog post author. Mingwei Ma contributed to this post.

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