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Individual development accounts update: Research Highlights, Legislative Opportunities and innovative ida practice. Overview of Today’s Webinar. Ida Rademacher , Moderator and Vice President, Policy and Research, CFED IDA research studies and ten-year impacts of IDAs
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Individual development accounts update: Research Highlights, Legislative Opportunities and innovative ida practice
Overview of Today’s Webinar Ida Rademacher, Moderator and Vice President, Policy and Research, CFED • IDA research studies and ten-year impacts of IDAs • Legislative opportunities for IDA policy: AFI funding and reauthorization • NeighborWorks Umpqua DreamSavers Program
Housekeeping • All webinar attendees are muted to ensure sound quality (this webinar is being recorded) • If you have any trouble dialing in, you can listen through your computer by connecting speakers or a headset to your computer • If you experience any technical issues, please email livemeeting@cfed.org
Asking Questions • Q&A sessions at the end of each presentation • Ask a question anytime by typing the question into the text box of the GoToWebinar Control Panel • Answers to questions not addressed during the webinar will be posted online along with the webinar recording • Q&A facilitated by Lauren Stebbins, External Relations Associate, CFED
Speakers • Caroline Ratcliffe, Senior Fellow, The Urban Institute • Signe-Mary McKernan, Senior Fellow/Economist, The Urban Institute • Michal Grinstein-Weiss, Associate Professor, University of North Carolina School of Social Work • Carol Wayman, Federal Policy Director, CFED • Inemesit Imoh, Policy Associate, CFED • Betty Tamm, Executive Director, NeighborWorks Umpqua • Rebekah Barger, IDA Program Manager, NeighborWorks Umpqua
What Do We Know About IDAs?Urban Institute Literature ReviewZielewski, Ratcliffe, McKernan, et al.http://www.urban.org/publications/412439.htmlIDA Update Webinar: New Research Highlights, Legislative Opportunities, and Innovative IDA PracticeNovember 15, 2011 URBAN INSTITUTE
Overview • Two major areas: • Overall effect of IDA program participation • Effect of specific program design features • Three outcome areas: • Assets and debts • Economic outcomes • Comparisons of benefits and costs • Research includes experimental, quasi-experimental, and non-experimental methods URBAN INSTITUTE
Overall Effect: Assets and Debts • Low-income individuals can and do save. • No evidence that IDA participation increases net worth in the first 3 to 4 years. • IDA participation found to increase homeownership rates of renters after four years. • IDA participation is associated with business ownership and post-secondary educational advancement. URBAN INSTITUTE
Overall Effect: Economic Outcomes • IDA participation is associated with: • Increased employment • Better budgeting and financial planning • IDA participation is notassociated with: • Increased earnings • Reduced receipt of public assistance benefits URBAN INSTITUTE
Benefits and Costs of IDAs • Few studies of costs and benefits of IDAs. • Existing research looks at ADD and compares program costs to dollars saved. • $1 of net savings costs $3. • Analyses of different programs or benefits may produce different results. URBAN INSTITUTE
Program Design Features:Financial Education • Hours of education received are associated with increased: • Savings • Deposit frequency • No relationship between hours of education and asset purchase URBAN INSTITUTE
Program Design Features:Match Rates & Match Caps • Higher match rates are: • Associated with greater likelihood of being a saver and staying in the program • Not associated with higher savings • Higher match caps are associated with higher savings URBAN INSTITUTE
New AFI Program EvaluationUrban Institute, RTI, and MEF Associates
Research questions • What is the impact of AFI program participation on immediate, short-run outcomes such as savings, asset purchases, and material hardship? • How do specific AFI program design features affect immediate, short-term participant outcomes? URBAN INSTITUTE
Importance of this project • First experimental evaluation of individual development account (IDA) projects operating under the Assets for Independence Act • Builds upon prior IDA evaluation research URBAN INSTITUTE
Basic evaluation design • Two sites • At each site: • Control group and two treatment groups • Total sample of 1,000 people • Special funding announcement URBAN INSTITUTE
Short-run participant outcomes • Savings patterns • Asset purchases • Debt holdings • Employment and earnings • Means-tested benefit receipt • Material hardship avoidance URBAN INSTITUTE
Michal Grinstein-Weiss Michael Sherraden William Gale William Rohe Mark Schreiner Clinton Key Ten-Year Impacts of Individual Development Accounts on Homeownership Evidence from a Randomized Experiment
American Dream Demonstration • The American Dream Demonstration (ADD) is the only randomized longitudinal experiment on IDAs in the US • Conducted in Tulsa, OK from 1998 to 2003 • Eligibility: Individuals had to be employed and earn less than 150% of the federal poverty level at entry • Random assignment of 1,103 participants • Interviews at baseline (Wave 1), 18-months (Wave 2), and 4-years after assignment (Wave 3)
The ADD Experiment • Asset goals: home purchase, home improvement or repair, business start-up or expansion, post-secondary education or training, or retirement accounts • Match rate of 2:1 for home purchase and 1:1 for all other uses • Maximum matched deposit: $750 per year for 3 years; Participants could accumulate up to $6,750 for home purchase and $4,500 for other qualified uses
Major Findings on Homeownership from Previous Waves • Findings from Waves 1-3 (1998-2003) indicate • Positive effect on homeownership • Homeownership rates rose rapidly in both groups and increased by about 7 percentage points more in the treatment group than in the control group • Treatment group was more likely to engage in debt-clearing activities to prepare to apply for a home loan
ADD Experiment Wave 4 • Assessment of the long-term impact of IDA programs • Follow-up with both treatment and control group participants 10 years after random assignment (6 years after the end of the program) • Collaboration between UNC, the Center for Social Development, and the Brookings Institution • Data collection conducted by RTI International from August 2008 to April 2009
Loan Characteristics and Loan Performance • 90% of mortgage holders at wave 4 in both treatment and control groups held fixed-rate mortgages • Average interest rate about 6.4% in both groups • Very few cases of serious delinquency or foreclosure in either group • No statistically significant difference between the treatment and control groups on loan characteristics or loan performance
Caveats for Generalization • Self-selected and highly motivated people in both groups • Housing market in Tulsa • Other financial assistance and social support available in Tulsa • Crossovers • Pioneer IDA program
Summary • Large increases in homeownership for both the treatment and the control group over the 10-year period • Good mortgage products • No statistically significant impact on homeownership rates at wave 4 • Control group members were able to catch up by wave 4 • Within the IDA-eligible population, people with higher incomes may be more able to achieve homeownership
Acknowledgements • John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation • Annie E. Casey Foundation • Charles Stewart Mott Foundation • F.B. Heron Foundation • Rockefeller Foundation • Smith Richardson Foundation • National Poverty Center • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Research Q&A • Ask a question by typing the question into the text box of the GoToWebinar Control Panel • If you experience any technical issues, please email livemeeting@cfed.org
AFI: Preserve funding levels Senate HHS Appropriations Subcommittee: $23.907 million (funding levels preserved) House HHS Appropriations Subcommittee: $8.9 million (funding levels cut 63%) Conference Committee discussions beginning
AFI Reauthorization:Priority Changes • Change the federal to non-federal match rate from 1:1 to 2:1. • Allow IDA funds to include replacement of outdated homes and home repair. • Flexibility with qualified expenses for education. • Raise the total amount families can receive from $2,000 single/$4,000 double to $5,000/$10,000. • Expand the income eligibility standards to include 80% of Adjusted Gross Income in addition to 200% federal poverty level and TANF eligible. • Support for state programs.
AFI Reauthorization • Stephanie Tubbs Jones Assets for Independence Reauthorization Act of 2011 (H.R. 1623) • Waivers included • Committees of jurisdiction: • House Ways and Means • Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP)
Possible AFI Senate Bill • Pending AFI reauthorization bill in the Senate • The bill would be similar to H.R. 1623
www.cfed.org www.cfed.org/go/advocacy Latest on legislation, track bills, send messages • Carol Wayman, Federal Policy Director, 202.207.0125, cwayman@cfed.org • Katherine Lucas, Policy Analyst, 202.408.9788, klucas-smith@cfed.org • Inemesit Imoh, Policy Associate, 202.207.0135, iimoh@cfed.org • Jessica Morales, Administrative Assistant, 202.207.0159, jmorales@cfed.org
Policy Q&A • Ask a question by typing the question into the text box of the GoToWebinar Control Panel • If you experience any technical issues, please email livemeeting@cfed.org
NeighborWorks UmpquaUsing Research as a Tool to Help Shape an IDA ProgramPresented by:Betty Tamm & Rebekah Barger
Dream$avers IDA Program • 12 counties in Southwestern, Southern, Central and Eastern Oregon • 587 active savers and 371 graduates • 5 asset types • 3 funding sources
Evaluation + Research Add Up • Who is the program missing? • What are participants asking to save for? • Where are the gaps in other program funding where the IDA might fit in? • What is the success rate of the program? • How can the IDA Initiative better reach hard working Oregonians?
Putting It Into Practice • From evaluation came new legislation • New asset types • Modified age of eligibility from 18 to 12 • Opportunities to use innovative products • From research comes new opportunities • Improved marketing as a result of research • Emphasis shift as economy changes • Increased focus on financial literacy and saving
Knowledge Gems Program evaluation and research • Resonates with policymakers, funders and community members • Easily utilized to grow program • Assists in connecting with participants’ needs
NeighborWorks Umpqua Contact Information: Betty Tamm btamm@nwumpqua.org and Rebekah Barger rbarger@nwumpqua.org
IDA Practice Q&A • Ask a question by typing the question into the text box of the GoToWebinar Control Panel • If you experience any technical issues, please email livemeeting@cfed.org
Conclusion • Webinar PowerPoint and recording will be available online later this week • Follow up email with links to access these materials • Comments and feedback on this webinar can be sent to lstebbins@cfed.org