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View Research by Author - Yunju Nam
Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/YunjuNam
| Viewing 1-4 of 4. Most recent posts listed first. | | Do Welfare and IDA Program Policies Affect Asset Holdings? (Policy Briefs/Opportunity and Ownership Project)This brief presents an empirical analysis of how asset tests affect families’ asset holdings. The findings suggest that more lenient asset tests and more generous IDA program rules can lead families to increase their asset holdings. Relaxed vehicle asset limits, for example, are associated with increased vehicle ownership. Since people often need a reliable car to get to work, this finding suggests that exempting at least one vehicle in all states may increase employment and job stability among low-income families. The findings also suggest that restrictions on withdrawals and incentives built into restricted asset accounts and IDA programs may provide families with motivation to build assets. | Publication Date: May 07, 2008 | Availability: HTML | PDF | Determinants of Asset Building (Series/Poor Finances: Assets and Low Income Households)This report provides a policy-oriented conceptual framework that has the potential to explain saving and asset accumulation across the entire population and to account for the low levels of saving and asset accumulation in the low-income population. The report also reviews empirical evidence that supports or challenges this framework. | Publication Date: April 07, 2008 | Availability: HTML | PDF | The Effects of Welfare and IDA Program Rules on the Asset Holdings of Low-Income Families (Series/Poor Finances: Assets and Low Income Households)This report examines the effects of a comprehensive set of 13 welfare, Food Stamp, individual development account (IDA), earned income tax credit (EITC), and minimum wage program rules on the asset holdings of low-education single mothers and families. This report finds empirical evidence that more lenient asset limits in means-tested programs and more generous IDA program rules may have positive effects on asset holdings of low-education single mothers and families. | Publication Date: October 10, 2007 | Availability: HTML | PDF | Assessing Asset Data on Low-Income Households:: Current Availability and Options for Improvement (Series/Poor Finances: Assets and Low Income Households)This report identifies the most reliable and informative data sources for understanding low-income households’ assets and liabilities, details their limitations, and provides options for improving asset data sources and collection methods. The report evaluates 12 data sets and identifies three as having the greatest potential for future asset research—the Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF), the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP), and the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID). | Publication Date: October 10, 2007 | Availability: HTML | PDF |
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