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Strategies to Build Individual Assets: IDAs, EITC, and CSAs Building Financial Assets Conference Sponsored by the Jessie Ball duPont Fund Airlie Conference Center □ October 25-27, 2006 Carl Rist, Director, SEED Initiative CFED
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www.cfed.org Establishing the need for asset building: The 2005 Assets and Opportunity Scorecard Most comprehensive tool yet to measure ownership and financial security at the state level. Provides comparable, state- by-state data on asset accumulation and protection.
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www.cfed.org A look at Florida Overall grade on asset performance: C Overall policy rating: Standard IndexGradeRating Financial securityCSubstandard Business DevelopmentBSubstandard HomeownershipBFavorable Health careFStandard EducationCFavorable Tax policy and accountability Substandard
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www.cfed.org Noteworthy data on asset building for Florida 29 th in net worth of households 28 th in asset poverty 35 th in homeownership rate No state-funded IDA program No state EITC TANF asset limit = $2,000 (average)
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www.cfed.org A look at Delaware Overall grade on asset performance: A Overall policy rating: Favorable IndexGradeRating Financial securityASubstandard Business DevelopmentCFavorable HomeownershipASubstandard Health careAFavorable EducationCFavorable Tax policy and accountability Favorable
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www.cfed.org Noteworthy data on asset building for Delaware 12 th in net worth of households 4 th in asset poverty 2 nd in homeownership rate No state-funded IDA program No state EITC TANF asset limit = $1,000 (below avg.)
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www.cfed.org A look at Virginia Overall grade on asset performance: C Overall policy rating: Substandard IndexGradeRating Financial securityCSubstandard Business DevelopmentFFavorable HomeownershipASubstandard Health careCSubstandard EducationBFavorable Tax policy and accountability Substandard
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www.cfed.org Noteworthy data on asset building for Virginia 21 st in net worth of households 26 th in asset poverty 6 th in homeownership rate State-funded IDA program No state EITC TANF asset limit = no limit (one of only two states)
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www.cfed.org A Proven Asset-Building Tool: Individual Development Accounts Individual Development Accounts (IDAs) are: Centerpiece of a new asset-building strategy Restricted savings account, used for: Homeownership Business start-up Post-secondary education and training Designed to increase savings of poor, working poor and welfare recipients. Incentive? Match from public or private sources, PLUS economic literacy training.
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www.cfed.org How IDAs Work
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www.cfed.org IDAs: Precedents and models Over 300 programs and 15,000 savers across the U.S. Delaware: Delawareans Save Florida (Jacksonville area): NE FL CAA, Real Sense Prosperity Campaign/IDA Partnership Virginia (Richmond area): New Visions, New Ventures, Inc.
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www.cfed.org IDAs: Impact ADD evaluation (large-scale IDA demonstration with over 2,000 participants). On average, ADD participants: Had family income at 116% of the family-size- adjusted poverty line, Saved $19.07 per month in average net deposits (1.6% of monthly income), Made a deposit in about 6 of every 12 months, With an average match rate of 2:1, accumulated $700 per year in IDAs.
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www.cfed.org A New Idea: Children’s Savings Accounts What difference would it make if every child started with an account at birth? What are CSAs? A vision: $1,000 at birth for every child, Accounts used for asset building, Universal system (“opt-out” model) Progressive matches Appropriate financial education delivered at scale
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www.cfed.org CSAs: Precedents and Models International precedents: U.K. Child Trust Fund Canada Learning Bond Singapore (Child Development Accounts) SEED Demonstration in U.S. Multi-year, multi-site experiment with SEED (children’s savings) accounts 1,250 accounts with children in 12 sites, including 500 in Michigan.
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www.cfed.org CSAs: Precedents and Models (more) Y.E.S. (Youth Experiencing Savings) at Boys and Girls Clubs of DE 71 middle-school aged children Models delivery of SEED accounts via Boys and Girls Clubs. Accounts held at Artisans Bank and Smith, Barney.
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www.cfed.org CSAs: Impact SEED Progress SEED Initiative, as of December 2005: 1,089 accounts open Avg. accumulation varies across sites and age cohorts
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www.cfed.org Resources: IDAs: www.cfed.org - clearinghouse www.assetsalliance.org - training http://gwbweb.wustl.edu (Center for Social Development) – research http://gwbweb.wustl.edu CSAs: www.cfed.org (SEED Initiative) – clearinghouse www.cfed.org www.assetbuilding.org (New America Foundation) – federal policy www.assetbuilding.org http://gwbweb.wustl.edu - research http://gwbweb.wustl.edu
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www.cfed.org Contact: Carl Rist CFED 123 W. Main St., Suite 210 Durham, NC 27701 919.688.6444 919.688.6580 (fax) carl@cfed.org www.cfed.org www.cfed.org/go/scorecard
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