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Make Your Path (MY Path™) June 7, 2013 Federation Annual Meeting Delivered By: Margaret Libby, Executive Director Mission SF Community Financial Center. Mission SF Community Financial Center: Overview. Mission SF Community Financial Center. PRESENTATION OVERVIEW 1. Mission SF Introduction
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Make Your Path (MY Path™)June 7, 2013 Federation Annual MeetingDelivered By:Margaret Libby, Executive Director Mission SF Community Financial Center
Mission SF Community Financial Center: Overview Mission SF Community Financial Center PRESENTATION OVERVIEW 1. Mission SF Introduction 2. Make Your Path (MY Path™) Design and Results 3. MY Path Lessons and Next Steps in 2013
Mission SF Community Financial Center: Overview Mission SF Purpose • Mission SF positions low-income youth to take control of their personal finances by ensuring they have: • Access to quality financial products; • A working knowledge of personal finance best practices; • A social support system to develop and sustain sound financial habits. • When we do this, we promote upward economic mobility and cultivate a stronger, more sustainable economy.
Mission SF Core Strategies • Reach people that are not being well-served • Reach them through strategic partnerships where they are • Bundle services to maximize client outcomes • Evaluate process and impact outcomes on an ongoing basis • Keep scale in mind • Develop and share best practices and lessons with field
The MY Path Opportunity Municipal youth employment programs represent a powerful channel to reach millions of youth from underbanked and unbanked households. • 34% of youth ages 16-19, and 55% of youth ages 16-24 are in the labor force (US Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2012) • 40+ million youth are ages 15-24 years (Census, 2010) • No system in place to link them to accounts, financial capability and savings structures
Financial Services Access In San Francisco FINANCIAL SERVICES ACCESS Banks & Credit Unions Check Cashers & Payday Lenders
MY Path Overview • Engage youth in the financial mainstream the moment they receive their first paycheck • Build financial capability through hands-on experience budgeting and saving their first income stream • Shift youth aspirations as they set and meet personal savings goals • Spur economic mobility through establishment of savings behaviors and college savings
MY Path: Behavioral Economics Make It Automatic – Program enrollment Make It Easy –Direct deposit and auto-deposit Loss Aversion – MY Path savings matches Power of the Pack – Peer influence and support Pre-set Decisions – MY Path savings contract
MY Path: Data Driven Programming • Three Types of Outcomes • Financial knowledge – JumpStart • Financial behaviors – budgeting, tracking expenses, savings • Youth development – future orientation, self-efficacy, control
MY Path Participant Profile, 2011-13 • Ten Partner Sites 280 youth each year from ten community based organizations implementing the San Francisco Mayor’s Youth Employment and Education Program (MYEEP) • Income Over half (58%) were from households receiving public assistance, 26% living in public housing, and 86% with annual incomes below half of San Francisco’s median income. • Age 9th and 10th graders, average age of 15 years. • Ethnicity41% African American, 34% Asian/Pacific Islander, 18% Latino, and 7% declining to state
MY Path Impact, 2011-13 • Over 500 MYEEP participants have opened accounts. • Over $450,000 in savings, this year over $1,000 per youth! • MY Path Savings, 2012-13 • Over Half (59%) met their 6-month goal. • Youth saved $238,000 in their MY Path Restricted Accounts, an • average of $500 per youth. • In “transactional” bank account, over $100,000 in additional, • “passive savings,” or $500 per youth!
MY Path Impact, 2011-12 • Financial Practices and Behaviors
MY Path Lesson 1: Technology for Scale Challenge: In-person content delivery with geographically disparate sites is time and resource intensive. Solution: Develop online content delivery platform and implement a Train-the-Trainer model so that youth at each site can lead peer learning sessions.
MY Path Lesson 2: Incentivize Saving and Other Financial Behaviors Challenge: Financial incentives for deposits effectively nudged participants to save, but did not promote other financial behaviors such as budgeting and tracking expenses. Solution: Expand incentive structure to reward not only savings, but also other sound financial behaviors.
MY Path Lesson 3: Flexible Savings Products Challenge: Some youth participants have their own bank accounts and agencies want flexibility in financial product offerings. Solution: In close partnership with Community Trust, offer restricted MY Path savings accounts to all, and regular savings accounts with ATMs to those who want them. Typical Youth Paycheck
MY Path 2013-14: Up to 600 More Youth! • 20 new San Francisco youth employment site partners. • MY Path restricted account at Community Trust for their savings, and a second account for paycheck balance • Up to $160 per youth to incentivize key financial behaviors. • Online interactive financial education platform alongside in-person engagement at program sites, facilitated by site staff and MY Path Youth Coaches.
Hear Directly From MY Path Savers PEDRO Columbia Park Boys & Girls Club Goal: $470 for college End Total with Matches : $720 IMANI City Hall, Supervisor Avalos MY Path Goal: $480 just to save End Total with Matches: $730
Margaret Libby, Executive Director mlibby@mission.coop Vishnu Sridharan, MY Path Director 415-206-0846 x18 www.mission.coop MY Path Working Paper available at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco’s website: Increasing Financial Capability among Economically Vulnerable Youth: MY Path.