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View Research by Author - Elizabeth Bell

Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/ElizabethBell


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Data Appendix to Federal Expenditures on Infants and Toddlers in 2007 (Research Report)
Adam Kent, Tracy Vericker, Paul Johnson, Julia Isaacs, Jennifer Ehrle Macomber, Gillian Reynolds, Elizabeth Bell, Rebecca L. Clark, Rosalind Berkowitz King, Christopher Spiro, C. Eugene Steuerle, Adam Carasso

Federal Expenditures on Infants and Toddlers in 2007 looks comprehensively at federal spending and tax expenditures targeted toward infants and toddlers. This appendix details our data sources, the programs we include, and the methodology used to estimate the percentage of federal expenditures that went to infants and toddlers in 2007.

Posted to Web: June 03, 2009Publication Date: May 26, 2009

Data Appendix to Kids' Share 2008 (Research Report)
Gillian Reynolds, Elizabeth Bell, Rebecca L. Clark, Rosalind E. Berkowitz, Christopher Spiro

Kids' Share 2008, a second annual report, looks comprehensively at trends in federal spending and tax expenditures on children. This appendix details our data sources, the programs we include, and the methodology used to estimate the percentage of all expenditures that went to children.

Posted to Web: July 02, 2008Publication Date: June 24, 2008

Kids' Share 2007: Data Appendix (Research Report)
Gillian Reynolds, Elizabeth Bell, Rebecca L. Clark, Rosalind E. Berkowitz, Christopher Spiro, C. Eugene Steuerle, Adam Carasso

"Kids' Share 2007: How Children Fare in the Federal Budget" tracks trends in federal spending on children from 1960 to 2017 by analyzing over 100 programs through which the federal government spends on children. This appendix lists our data sources, describes each program, and explains the methodology used to estimate the percentage of all expenditures that went to children.

Posted to Web: March 15, 2007Publication Date: March 15, 2007

Financial Literacy Strategies: Where Do We Go From Here? (Reports/Opportunity and Ownership Project)
Robert I. Lerman, Elizabeth Bell

Report No. 1 of the Opportunity and Ownership Project. Financial services have become more free and accessible, but also increasingly complex. For new financial options to help most people, they must understand their options. Unfortunately, Americans have a weak grasp of basic finance. This paper emphasizes the importance of financial literacy and examines current financial education strategies. We explore two methods of financial education—broad financial curriculums and "teachable moments." After examining each, we suggest that a combination of the two perspectives, with the topics and strategies varying by target audience. We conclude by calling for a more rigorous evaluation of the effects of existing programs.

Posted to Web: August 17, 2006Publication Date: August 17, 2006

Growth and Decline in Tax Credits For Families With Children (Article/Tax Facts)
Elizabeth Bell, C. Eugene Steuerle

Under current law, there are three major tax credits that affect families with children: the earned income tax credit, the child and dependent care tax credit, and the child tax credit.

Posted to Web: July 10, 2006Publication Date: July 10, 2006

Individual Giving Compared To Charitable Gross Receipts (Article/Tax Facts)
Elizabeth Bell, Adam Carasso, C. Eugene Steuerle

Individual giving to public charities-most of which comes in the form of charitable deductions from tax filers who itemize on their returns-actually comprises only a small part of charities’ gross receipts each year: between 8 and 12 percent of gross receipts over the 1996-2003 period.

Posted to Web: January 16, 2006Publication Date: January 16, 2006

Budgetary Approaches to Health Policy: Summary Materials (Summary)
C. Eugene Steuerle, Randall R. Bovbjerg, Elizabeth Bell

On November 2nd, 2005, The Urban Institute and Health Affairs convened a roundtable of experts to discuss health care economizing and financing. The discussion centered on four topics: (1) consumers; (2) the role of state and federal government; (3) providers and other intermediaries; and (4) other efficiency efforts. This document provides a brief summary of the participants' comments in each of these four areas.

Posted to Web: November 02, 2005Publication Date: November 02, 2005

Strengthening Private Sources of Retirement Savings for Low-Income Families (Policy Briefs/Opportunity and Ownership Project)
Elizabeth Bell, Adam Carasso, C. Eugene Steuerle

Widening access to retirement savings vehicles and increasing the accumulations within these vehicles could help secure the future for many lower-income families. Currently, the role played by private pensions in asset building is small to nonexistent for most poor and lower-middle class workers. Instead, these persons rely primarily on Social Security and the savings in their home equity, if any, to sustain them in retirement. This brief, based on feedback from a roundtable of experts convened at the Urban Institute, provides background data on the assets of US households and discusses options for increasing levels of saving and retirement security for low- and moderate-income families.

Posted to Web: September 28, 2005Publication Date: September 28, 2005

Can Financial Literacy Enhance Asset Building? (Policy Briefs/Opportunity and Ownership Project)
Elizabeth Bell, Robert I. Lerman

Even when incentives to save and invest are strong, many low- and moderate-income families lack the basic knowledge to manage their income wisely, build wealth, and avoid excessive debt. This brief examines financial literacy research and programs to improve financial knowledge and decision-making. While research suggests that existing programs do make a difference in financial behavior, data collection and policy concerns make financial literacy a fertile ground for further development as part of an asset-building agenda.

Posted to Web: September 14, 2005Publication Date: September 14, 2005

How to Better Encourage Homeownership (Policy Briefs/Tax Policy: Issues and Options)
Adam Carasso, C. Eugene Steuerle, Elizabeth Bell

The way federal housing benefits are doled out suggests a U-shaped curve; subsidies are heaped on most households at higher incomes and some at very low incomes. Those in between get little. This brief describes revenue-neutral reforms that would level out the U-shaped curve and deliver ownership subsidies more equitably and efficiently to lower-to-middle-income households. Converting home-related tax deductions into refundable, capped credits introduces greater progressivity into the tax system, encourages homeownership among those at lower incomes, and curtails government subsidies for ever greater amounts of home borrowing.

Posted to Web: June 29, 2005Publication Date: June 29, 2005

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