Young people need assets to make the transition to adulthood. This article summarizes the four preceding articles on youth and saving, identifies policy and program implications, and suggests directions for future research. It is clear that saving is difficult for many people and throughout the life course. Efforts to help young people accumulate assets might encourage saving by parents, encourage saving by youth, or provide subsidies. The latter strategy is most likely to reduce inequities associated with socioeconomic status. These strategies do not have to be pursued in isolation, and ongoing conversations across disciplines and between scholars and practitioners could yield useful insight. In addition, research on existing asset-buildin...
Many states are implementing asset development strategies to promote postsecondary education for low...
In the past two decades, the financial education movement has rapidly grown into a set of policies a...
Toward a Theory of Financial Savings and Child Well-Being: Implications for Research on a Children a...
Young people need assets to make the transition to adulthood. This article summarizes the four prece...
A major hypothesis of asset-building is that early access to savings accounts leads to continued and...
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://www.jstor.org/stable/info...
This Working Paper has been submitted for inclusion in theEncyclopedia of Social Work\u27s new onlin...
Research findings on asset-building programs, such as Individual Development Accounts (IDAs) for adu...
American society reflects considerable class immobility, much of which is due to the wide gap in col...
We propose that asset accumulation occurs in three stages. In the first stage (reallocation), curren...
This paper has two main goals. First, we provide a review of 38 studies on the relationship between ...
Research from a variety of studies finds that combining financial education and savings account owne...
As youth transition to adulthood, their ability to save and accumulate assets becomes very important...
The ownership of financial assets protects American households from experiencing the struggles of in...
This paper addresses Individual Development Accounts, which feature matched savings for the poor as ...
Many states are implementing asset development strategies to promote postsecondary education for low...
In the past two decades, the financial education movement has rapidly grown into a set of policies a...
Toward a Theory of Financial Savings and Child Well-Being: Implications for Research on a Children a...
Young people need assets to make the transition to adulthood. This article summarizes the four prece...
A major hypothesis of asset-building is that early access to savings accounts leads to continued and...
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://www.jstor.org/stable/info...
This Working Paper has been submitted for inclusion in theEncyclopedia of Social Work\u27s new onlin...
Research findings on asset-building programs, such as Individual Development Accounts (IDAs) for adu...
American society reflects considerable class immobility, much of which is due to the wide gap in col...
We propose that asset accumulation occurs in three stages. In the first stage (reallocation), curren...
This paper has two main goals. First, we provide a review of 38 studies on the relationship between ...
Research from a variety of studies finds that combining financial education and savings account owne...
As youth transition to adulthood, their ability to save and accumulate assets becomes very important...
The ownership of financial assets protects American households from experiencing the struggles of in...
This paper addresses Individual Development Accounts, which feature matched savings for the poor as ...
Many states are implementing asset development strategies to promote postsecondary education for low...
In the past two decades, the financial education movement has rapidly grown into a set of policies a...
Toward a Theory of Financial Savings and Child Well-Being: Implications for Research on a Children a...