The Children’s Budget provides a comprehensive analysis of the share of spending allocated to kids over more than 250 government programs in the federal budget. This analysis tracks domestic and international spending on children, including both mandatory and discretionary funding across nearly every federal department, representing numerous agencies and bureaus. First Focus on Children has published an annual Children’s Budget for more than 15 years.
The 2024 Children’s Budget finds that the share of U.S. federal spending on children fell to 8.87% in Fiscal Year 2024, representing the third straight year of decline. Both mandatory and discretionary spending for children fell in FY 2024 as a share of the federal budget.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, more U.S. lawmakers prioritized children in their funding decisions, pushing the share of federal spending on children to a record high of nearly 12% in FY 2021. Since then, Congress has clawed back most of these wins for children, resulting in a steady three-year decline in both total dollars and share of spending allocated to kids in the federal budget.
In FY 2024, lawmakers spent $18.396 billion less on children than in FY 2023, amounting to an inflation-adjusted decline of 5.59%— although this figure represents an improvement over the double-digit declines of FY 2022 and FY 2023. Investments in children’s programs abroad account for a mere 0.09% of the total federal budget. This continued systematic disinvestment in the nation’s children has visibly damaged their health and well-being. According to U.S. Census Bureau data, child poverty more than doubled in 2022 compared to 2021, with the rate of children living in poverty increasing from 5.2% to 12.4% and rose to 13.7% in 2023. The U.S. infant mortality rate in 2022, which already was much higher than in other wealthy nations, increased for the first time in two decades. Millions of children are losing health care. Nearly 5 million children have lost access to Medicaid through the unwinding process. Global vaccination rates for children have fallen to 2008 levels, with long-forgotten diseases including measles and polio surging in the United States for the first time in decades.
This current disinvestment is especially alarming in comparison to funding levels during the coronavirus pandemic when the federal government increased investments in children and proved a better future for children was possible.
The COVID-19 public health emergency spurred a surge of investment in children with historic temporary improvements to programs including the Child Tax Credit (CTC), the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), education and child care stabilization, as well as other timely measures such as economic impact payments. In FY 2022 alone, economic impact payments ended, the expansion of the Child Care and Development Block Grant was phased out, and improvements to the Child Tax Credit expired. In FY 2023 and 2024, lawmakers eliminated multiple large investments in childhood nutrition.
Rapid reductions in pandemic-era programs continued to drive the decline in funding for children in FY 2024. The elimination of Pandemic EBT and the expiration of emergency allotments in SNAP represented the two largest drivers, with those programs alone reducing funding for children by $33.609 billon. Other notable declines include the discretionary portion of the Education Stabilization Fund, the Emergency Connectivity Fund, and the Child and Adult Care Food Program. The end of these pandemic-related investments reduced the share of the federal budget going to children to just 8.87% in FY 2024 – more than a quarter off the FY 2021 high of 11.98%.
Program Spotlight
SNAP, previously known as food stamps, provides the first line of defense against childhood food insecurity. SNAP provides monthly benefits on an electronic benefits transfer (EBT) card which can only be used to purchase food items at grocery stores and other participating vendors. Nearly 14 million children rely on SNAP for access to nutritious foods and more than half of all SNAP recipients are children.
Research has shown that increased investments in FY 2022 (via updates to the Thrifty Food Plan) reduced child poverty by 8.6% in the fourth quarter of 2021, and reduced the severity of poverty for an estimated 6.2 million children. Unfortunately, several proposals by policymakers aim to end these routine updates, which could cause SNAP benefits to fall behind scientific nutrition recommendations and reduce their purchasing power.
International Spending on Children
International spending on children makes up a dramatically smaller share of the federal budget, with total spending equaling approximately 1/100th of domestic spending on kids. Spending on international children’s programs accounts for a mere 0.09% of the total federal budget and only 10.16% of spending internationally in FY 2024.
Overview of the President’s FY 2025
Budget President Biden’s budget for FY 2025 offers a glimmer of hope for a better future for kids, increasing spending on children by nearly $200 billion. By far the largest driver of this increase would be the expanded refundability of the Child Tax Credit, which would provide an additional $186 billion to families with kids, especially those who currently receive less than the full credit or no credit at all because their parents’ income is too low. This increase —totaling 648% —along with other key investments would raise the share of federal spending on kids to 11.11%, a large improvement but still below the investment reached by the pandemic policy response.
Key Takeaways for Children’s Budget 2024
- FY 2024 marked the third straight year that overall spending on children and the share of federal spending on children declined, falling from a high of 11.98% all the way down to 8.87%—meaning children lost more than a quarter of their share of federal funding over this period.
- Children fell even further behind when accounting for inflation—for the third straight year spending on children failed to keep up with inflation.
- The expiration of nutrition program expansions during the pandemic –including SNAP emergency allotments and Pandemic EBT—were the main drivers of the decline in children’s funding in FY 2024.
- Education funding has increased dramatically from FY 2020 to FY 2024. However, this is entirely the result of temporary Education Stabilization Funds which will phase out, withdrawing needed support for public schools, over the next few years. Without this temporary funding, spending on children’s education would have remained roughly flat since FY 2020.
- Investments in children’s health programs represent a bright spot in the Federal Budget, with the share of federal spending increasing by nearly a third from FY 2020 to FY 2024.
- The President’s Budget Request for FY 2025 would increase spending on children by 26.57% adjusted for inflation. By far the largest driver of this increase would be a $186 billion dollar increase in the Child Tax Credit.