Program Helps Get Savers Started
February 21, 2001 The Charlotte Observer by Amber Veverka
Spurred on by new studies that show that the average American
household has less than $10,000 in net financial assets - including
retirement savings - the Consumer Federation of America has launched a
program to help low- and moderate-income people save more money.
The Consumer Federation of America, with a $300,000 grant from the
Charlotte-based Bank of America Foundation, has created America Saves,
a campaign to get 100,000 low- to moderate-income Americans to
regularly save money in a bank account or pay down debt and to connect
them with free money-management counseling.
The Consumer Federation, a Washington-based nonprofit association of
consumer groups, announced America Saves on Tuesday. It's modeling the
program, which is free to participants, after its pilot in Cleveland.
In April, it will launch its next campaign in Kansas City, Mo. Consumer
Federation Executive Director Stephen Brobeck said he did not yet know
which other cities will later launch programs, though he said the CFA
is talking to several cities in the Southeast. It's not being offered
in Charlotte now. Brobeck said two recent CFA studies, one detailing
changes in Americans' financial assets between 1995 and 1998 and the
other measuring people's desire to save money, support the need for the
push to build savings.
"There is a relatively low level of savings by most Americans,"
Brobeck said. "The good news is there's a strong desire to save and
build wealth."
One study, conducted for the Consumer Federation by an Ohio State
University consumer professor, showed that the average household in
1998 (the most recent data available from the Federal Reserve) had a
net worth of $71,700, mostly from home equity.
But that same household had only $9,850 in net financial assets,
including retirement money. And households with income under $25,000
had net financial assets of just $1,000.
But even people who don't earn a lot of money still want to save,
another CFA study shows. Half of Americans earning less than $20,000
say they have at some time set money aside for a financial goal, though
those people also say they don't think they earn enough to save
regularly.
America Saves participants will agree to identify a financial goal
and create a plan to reach it - such as "I will build up an emergency
fund to $500" or "I will pay down $300 in credit card debt," Brobeck
said. Organizers will connect members to financial planners who have
agreed to work in the program for free.
In some cases, banks that work with the program may waive fees to
get people to save. In Cleveland, Brobeck said, CFA persuaded 10 banks
and credit unions to remove minimum-balance fees for savers in the
program.
"The research is clear that at almost every household income, almost
everyone can save," Brobeck said. "The question is one more of interest
and opportunity. We're trying to create interest, provide encouragement
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