creating and testing social policy: evidence from seed for oklahoma kids research

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Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma Kids Research Yunju Nam, Youngmi Kim, Margaret Clancy, Michael Sherraden, and Robert Zager Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas November 1, 2011

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Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma Kids Research. Yunju Nam, Youngmi Kim, Margaret Clancy, Michael Sherraden, and Robert Zager Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas November 1 , 2011. Child Development Accounts. Child Development Accounts (CDAs). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Creating and Testing Social Policy:Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma

Kids Research

Yunju Nam, Youngmi Kim, Margaret Clancy, Michael Sherraden, and Robert Zager

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas November 1, 2011

Page 2: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Child Development Accounts

Page 3: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Child Development Accounts (CDAs)

• Child Development Accounts are saving and asset building accounts, initiated by public policy.

• Ideally, CDAs are lifelong (begin at birth), universal (available to all), and progressive (greater subsidies for the poorest children).

(for policy concept, see Sherraden, 1991)

Page 4: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Asset Building for Development Often via Education

• CDA policies are focused on asset building for child development, education, lifelong well-being.

• Saving behavior matters for CDAs, but this is not the primary focus.

• Psychological and behavioral effects may include hope, control, future orientation, effort (e.g., Elliott & Beverly, 2011).

• By design, CDA policies can be very paternalistic, with automatic enrollment, restrictions on access until a certain age, and restrictions on use.

Page 5: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Inclusive 529 College Savings Plans

Page 6: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Inclusive 529 College Savings Plans

• Some state 529 plans are more progressive than others.

• A number of states have implemented inclusive policy strategies.

• Inclusive features make 529s more accessible to low- and moderate-income families.

Page 7: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

• Most plans require small initial contributions (median is $25).

• Eleven states provide matching contributions for low-to-moderate income families.

• States offer a limited selection of funds with different risk and return characteristics.

• The trend toward low fees continues, but not all plans are low cost .

529 Plan Potential for Inclusion

(for 529 policy assessment, see Clancy et al., 2004, 2006, 2011)

Page 8: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Potential of 529 Plans for a Universal and Progressive CDA in the US

• Every state has at least one 529 plan.

• Inclusive features that can be built into the policy—which would not happen via saving products in the market.

• Centralized CDA administration facilitates outreach, a systematic database, and assessment.

Page 9: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

SEED for Oklahoma Kids (SEED OK)

Research Design and Early Results

Page 10: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

A Policy Test of CDAs:SEED for Oklahoma Kids (SEED OK)

• Policy and research initiative designed to test the idea of universal and progressive accounts, lifelong asset building

• SEED research is multi-method: Experiment, Account Monitoring, and In-depth Interviews

• Oklahoma selected for the SEED OK experiment through a competitive process

Page 11: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

• An experiment with random sample of newborns from a statewide population

• Oversamples of African Americans, Latinos, and American Indians

• Random assignment to treatment group (n=1,358) and control group (n=1,346)

• Integrated into an existing policy structure—the Oklahoma College Savings Plan, or OK 529

SEED OK Research Design

Page 12: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

SEED OK Research Data

Type Dates Source

Birth records April - Jun 2007 andAug - Oct 2007

Oklahoma StateDepartment of Health

Baseline survey Aug 2007 - Apr 2008 RTI International

OK 529 account and savings records

Jan 2008 - June 2009(quarterly through 2014)

Program Manager(TIAA-CREF)

Page 13: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Oklahoma College Savings Plan (OK 529)

• State-sponsored 529 savings program

• Tax deduction and tax-free growth of earnings

• Can be used for post-secondary education at:• Colleges and universities• Graduate and post-graduate schools• Community colleges• Certain proprietary and vocational schools

Page 14: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

SEED OK 529 Savings Plan Account

• Auto-enrollment in the OK 529 for treatment group newborns

• Account owned by the state

• Treatment child named as beneficiary

• $1,000 initial deposit

• Invested in the OK 529 Balanced Option

• State-owned account can be used for post-secondary education until child reaches age 30

Page 15: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Other Features of SEED OK Design

• Savings match for income-eligible treatments on their deposits of up to $250 per year for 4 years (2008 - 2011)

• Follow-up telephone interviews with all treatments and controls in 2011 and possibly again later

• In-depth interviews with select SEED OK participants from Fall 2009 through Spring 2010 and possibly again later

Page 16: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

SEED OK 529 Accounts

• SEED OK tracks three types of OK 529 accounts for the child:

• State-owned• Participant-owned (parent or caregiver)• Other private (relatives or friends)

• As a policy concept, these can be viewed together as a single integrated 529 account.

• Any control has complete access to open a 529 account in the SEED OK experiment.

Page 17: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

SEED OK Accounts and Incentives

Account Type Treatment Control

State-owned account

• OK 529 account opened automatically with $1,000

• No state-owned OK 529 account

Participant-owned account

• OK 529 account opening encouraged

• Time-limited $100 account opening incentive

• Savings matched, if income eligible

• OK 529 account may be opened

• No information or incentives offered

Other private account

• Family, friend, etc. can open account for child

• No incentives

• Family, friend, etc. can open account for child

• No incentives

Page 18: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

A Compromise to Test the Policy

• The CDA policy concept is a single, integrated account into which all deposits would flow.

• SEED OK uses an existing policy structure (OK 529), and so must use the current account structure.

• In SEED OK, different deposits go into different 529 accounts, all with the child as the beneficiary.

• This is cumbersome and imperfect—but allows us to test the policy concept.

Page 19: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

SEED OK Key Research Questions

Can Child Development Accounts increase:

(1) 529 account holding,

(2) saving by participants, and

(3) total 529 assets?

Later, SEED OK can assess (4) child development and well-being.

(see Nam et al., 2011)

Page 20: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

529 Account Holding

99.9% for treatments vs. 2.3% for controls, and 16.4% of participants have their own account

Huge impacts―compare to:

• 62% take up of 529 account in MI SEED impact assessment, with $800 initial deposit, but requiring sign up (Marks et al, 2009).

• 3.8% of OK households with children up to age 18 holding any OK 529 account (State Treasurer, 2011).

Page 21: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Participant Savings

Average savings of $43 by treatments vs. $13 by controls in their private accounts:

• Effect size (saving amount), so far, is positive but quite modest.

• We know from qualitative research that families have a hard time thinking about college savings with newborns (especially during a recession).

• Nevertheless, positive impact on “seeding” college savings for people who might not otherwise save. We will see if they save more going forward.

Page 22: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Asset Building

Mean 529 total assets are $1,080 for treatments vs. $40 for controls:

• Because asset building is a main SEED OK goal, this is strong and meaningful policy result.

• To be sure, this outcome is structured and paternalistic—as all CDA policies are...but Social Security and 401(k) retirement plans are also structured and paternalistic.

Page 23: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Overall Account Openingand Savings Impacts

• State-owned account: close to 100% success of automatic account opening with $1,000 deposit for treatment participants (one out of 1,361 declined account)

• Impacts of SEED OK on account opening and on deposit and saving amounts are statistically significant for the state-owned and participant-owned accounts, but not for other private accounts

Page 24: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Summary and Conclusions:Child Development and Well-Being

The long-term test will be whether CDAs eventually yield positive impacts on:

• parental attitudes and behaviors • child development in early years• child expectations for education• child educational performance• child health and other measures of well-being

Page 25: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Summary and Conclusions:Toward an Inclusive CDA Policy?

• If a universal and progressive CDA policy is desirable (in the way that universal Social Security is desirable), then SEED OK has demonstrated policy feasibility by using the 529 policy system.

• If the critical policy test is positive impacts on education and other measures of well-being of children, then SEED OK is still in the early stages.

• Wave 2 of the survey has just been completed.

Page 26: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

Acknowledgements

SEED OK:

• Policy Demonstration: Oklahoma Governor, Treasurer, and Department of Health; TIAA-CREF

• Funders: Ford Foundation, Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, Lumina Foundation for Education

• Survey Research: RTI International

Page 27: Creating and Testing Social Policy: Evidence from SEED for Oklahoma  Kids Research

http://csd.wustl.edu/

[email protected] 314-935-8178

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