Designing Public Policy with Evidence from the Field
February 25, 2014

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Policy solutions to fill this gap need to address both the lack of resources that lower-income households can dedicate to saving and the lack of products that facilitate saving for flexible purposes. In response, the Asset Building Program at the New America Foundation has developed a proposal, The Financial Security Credit, which offers lower- and middle-income households the option to open an account and an incentive to save in that account at a moment when they are receiving an influx of resources—tax time.
Through a simple procedure integrated into the process of filing taxes, families can be linked to a range of savings products that are specific to their savings needs, including the flexible use savings of most consequence to low-income households. Over the past several years, versions of this concept have been tested in various forms across the United States, creating a rich research environment from which to distill insights that can inform a larger discussion of designing a scalable, nation-wide system for promoting savings at tax time among low-and moderate- income Americans. This paper will present the rationale for pursuing such a policy, review the existing evidence for the efficacy of tax-time savings programs, and explore the possibility of a national savings policy informed by those findings.
To read the full paper, please click here.