Ownership & Assets

Trend Alert: Automatic Savings is the New Black for 2011

  • By
  • Pamela Chan
February 23, 2011
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As fashion designers have New York Fashion Week to debut the hottest fashions for the year, financial services policy makers have America Saves Week (going on now from February 20-27) to showcase the hottest trends in personal savings. This year’s theme is “Make Savings Automatic.” Consumers are encouraged to set up auto-payments into a savings product.

New America Foundation Releases 2011 Bipartisan Legislative Agenda

February 22, 2011

Sacramento--The New America Foundation's California Asset Building Program has released its 2011 Bipartisan Legislative Agenda. The Agenda lays out both innovative and tested policies to help Californians exit poverty and gain control over their financial future.

The Uphill Battle to Scale an Innovative Antipoverty Approach

  • By Maurice Miller, Family Independence Initiative
February 21, 2011

In this paper, founder and CEO of the Family Independence Initiative Maurice Lim Miller outlines a new model for breaking the cycle of poverty, which shows promising results in three separate demonstration projects.

2011 California Asset Building Legislative Agenda

  • By
  • Olivia Calderon,
  • New America Foundation
February 21, 2011

In the 2011 California legislative session, the California Asset Building Program is advancing the following state policy initiatives (See printer-friendly downloadable agenda at right under Related Files):

AB 1182 (Hernandez) California Workforce Mobility Initiative

February 18, 2011

This measure removes the vehicle asset test, which prohibits recipients and applicants from owning a car worth more than $4,650, from CalWORKS eligibility rules. Less than a tenth of a percent of cases ever are found to exceed the vehicle limit, and removing the requirement saves the state millions in administrative time. California, however, continues to employ an overly restrictive vehicle asset test – one that undermines a workers ability to gain and maintain employment, thereby encouraging continued reliance on public assistance. 

AB 1175 (Fletcher) Tax-Time College Savings

February 18, 2011

This measure creates an easy way for Californians to save for college by amending the state income tax form to allow filers to directly deposit their refund into a state-administered tax-advantaged 529 college savings account. Providing an easy, structured savings opportunity at tax time is designed to help families save for postsecondary education. This bill requires the Franchise Tax Board to revise the state income tax form to allow a filer to deposit his or her tax return into a ScholarShare College Savings Account.

A sample letter of support is attached at right.

AB 597 (Eng) Financial Education Fund

February 17, 2011

This measure creates a financial education fund established in the Office of the Treasurer to authorize the state Controller to use the fund for consumer financial education efforts throughout the state. The fund would provide a funding source for organizations interested in partnering with California to provide consumers with the information they need to make sound financial decisions.

AB 38 (Bradford) Banking Development Districts

December 6, 2010

This measure creates a California Banking Development District program, a proven way to connect lower-income unbanked Californians with the financial products and services they need to enter the financial mainstream and begin to build savings and assets. It identifies specific “Banking Development Districts” where financial institutions will receive incentives such as state deposits to develop enhanced and expanded products and services for lower-income consumers.

Prize-Linked Savings Holds Promise, Isn't Panacea

  • By
  • Reid Cramer
February 21, 2011
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Peter Orszag takes to the pages of the Financial Times to herald an innovative idea to increase savings. Given the enduring popularity of lotteries, he suggests we can make savings more attractive by linking it to prizes.

The allure of lotteries, he argues, can be used to help raise the national savings rate, which over the long term is an important precondition for sustained economic growth. That’s a pretty big lift. As the former head of Obama’s White House budget shop, Orszag knows that most of the work will be done by the balance sheets of the public sector and business, but he is right that households will need to be part of this shift as well. Higher household savings, especially among low to middle income families, can contribute to increasing national savings and also, importantly, provide a “much-needed cushion against the vagaries of life.”

My friend and colleague at the New America Foundation, Steve Clemons, doesn’t like the idea one bit. He thinks it is small bore gimmick that will undercut the revenue raised by existing lotteries and take attention away from addressing our macroeconomic imbalances.

To be honest, I didn’t care for the idea either when I first heard of it. I don’t buy lottery tickets and I’m not a gambler myself (even though I don’t begrudge others from partaking if it is harmless). Gambling is not appealing to me because the house almost always wins and people often end up parting with money they can ill afford to lose. And I’ve never liked the idea of creating state-run lottery franchises as a way to extract resources from the public to pay for things (like schools) that should be priorities on their own. Still, lotteries sure are popular.

Peter Tufano of the Harvard Business School (and soon to become Dean of Oxford University's Business School) has been leading the way thinking about how to take the popularity for lotteries and put it to good use. In his conception, the principle investment is protected but the prospect of hitting the jackpot gets people to set aside money that might otherwise be earmarked for consumption. While this is a relatively new idea for the US, prized-linked savings lotteries have thrived for years in the United Kingdom, Latin America, and the Middle East. Since 2009, the Doorways to Dreams (D2D) Fund, the Filene Research Institute, and the Michigan Credit Union League have piloted the concept. They offered a share certificate that earns interest, is principal protected, and enters the saver into drawings for small monthly prizes and a large jackpot. When last I checked, more than 10,000 certificates with $4.67 million in savings have been opened since the start of the project and more than 300 account holders have won $22,000 in small, monthly prizes. There are updated figures available but the point is that the pilot has shown there is demand for this product and it can work in the marketplace.

I’ll agree that this idea is not the golden ticket. It will not solve the macroeconomic challenges of rebalancing global trade or transform the US from a nation of consumers into savers. Perhaps Orszag overplays his hand by linking these issues in his op-ed. But prized-linked savings lotteries are a way to make savings more attractive and begin the process. This will be a welcomed development since many  families on the lower end of the economic ladder can’t take advantage to the various saving incentives offered up in the tax code and miss out on opportunities if their employers don’t offer savings plans. That’s why we should be looking for mechanism, opportunities, and incentives to get these families saving more over time.

The CFPB: Let’s Make Sure the New Cop on the Beat Isn’t Relegated to a Desk Job

  • By
  • Pamela Chan
February 18, 2011
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To introduce itself to Americans, the CFPB calls itself a cop on the beat to patrol the consumer financial services industry and hold law-breaking financial companies accountable. This is an excellent characterization of what the bureau should do. After all, predatory financial products and services previously flourished without any restraint because there wasn’t anyone keeping watch over them.

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