Assessing the Impacts of a Novel Unconditional Gifted Savings Program
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Poverty
- Sponsor
- University of Pennsylvania
- Enrollment
- 750
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- Savings
- Status
- Withdrawn
- Last Updated
- last year
Overview
Brief Summary
The goal of this randomized control trial is to test the impacts of an unconditional Gifted Savings account of $2,000 of assets ($100 United States Dollars available upon enrollment; $500 United States Dollars available for emergency use each year for two years) on adults with household incomes of three times the Federal Poverty Level or less in Yellow Springs, Ohio.
Detailed Description
Many lower to middle income families are unable to weather an unforeseen financial emergency. Even in the best economic conditions, the personal saving rate in the US is profoundly low: just under 10% of disposable income. The consequences are as follows: * Some low to middle income families, and particularly families of color and those headed by single women, turn to alternative financial services (pawn shops, credit cards not paid in full, high-interest loans, and payday lenders) to cover the financial shock. Others turn to family and friends. * Over time, and with constrained financial resources, some households are unable to pay back these alternative financial services resulting in substantial debt. In the event these households turn to family and friends on a recurrent basis, relationships and a person's sense of dignity, worth, and control over one's future are fractured. * These financial conditions cause stress, anxiety, and other mental health issues that lock a person in the here and now--rationally occupied with the dire economic conditions of the present and unable to plan for the future This has a resultant impact on cognitive capacity, hope for the future, future savings and goals horizons, and mental well-being. This randomized control trial is being conducted to evaluate a program created by Gifted Savings (GS), an experimental non-profit start-up. GS is not a bank or an insured financial institution. GS will issue accounts seeded with $2,000 of assets in the form of cash, Bitcoin, and/or stock the experimental study group (n=250). The control group (n=500) will not receive a GS account but will be invited to complete study surveys every six months for 36 months. For participants who receive a GS account, the original value of the account is not guaranteed, as assets may increase or decrease in value over time depending on market conditions. After two years, participants may withdraw the entire value of their GS account or choose to continue holding the assets in the GS account. Assets may be held forever or until the GS non-profit ceases to exist. GS funds are unconditional, which means there are no restrictions or limitations on how the money can be spent. Withdrawn funds will be available by check or direct deposit. Over three years, researchers will measure the impacts of receiving a Gifted Savings account on: * Psychological distress * Employment and income * Financial well-being * Agency and hope for the future * Material hardship * Savings behavior and horizons * Ability to manage financial shocks * Subjective financial knowledge * Cryptocurrency knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors All participants will complete: * A baseline survey * Follow-up surveys at 6-, 12-, 18-, 24-, 30-, and 36-months after enrollment Participants who receive a Gifted Savings account will: * Register on the Gifted Savings website to claim their account * Hold their Gifted Savings account assets for at least two years Some participants who receive a Gifted Savings account will also participate in an in-depth interview. Researchers will compare participants who receive a Gifted Savings account to participants who do not receive a Gifted Savings account to test the effects of receiving a Gifted Savings account on the above research questions.
Investigators
Stacia West
Associate Professor & Co-Founding Director of the Center for Guaranteed Income Research
University of Pennsylvania
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Resident of Yellow Springs, Ohio
- •At least 18 years of age
- •Annual household income of three times the Federal Poverty Level or less
Exclusion Criteria
- •Not a resident of Yellow Springs, Ohio
- •Under 18 years of age
- •Annual household income of more than three times the Federal Poverty Level
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Savings
Time Frame: 6 months
Eight items to assess bank account ownership status (yes/no), savings and investing behaviors, past month's amount saved, total amount saved, confidence about meeting future financial obligations, and savings horizons.
Financial shock
Time Frame: 6 months
Five items to assess participants' ability to cover a $400 emergency expense, frequency of $400 emergency expenses over past 6 months, length of time savings could sustain household, likelihood of finding $2,000 for emergency expense, and estimated savings needed for future emergency expenses.
Mental health (Kessler 10)
Time Frame: 6 months
Each item is scored from one "none of the time" to five "all of the time." Scores of the 10 items are then summed, yielding a minimum score of 10 and a maximum score of 50. Low scores indicate low levels of psychological distress and high scores indicate high levels of psychological distress.
Hope (Adult Hope Scale)
Time Frame: 6 months
Four items measure pathways thinking, four items measure agency thinking, and four items are fillers. The four pathways thinking items and the four agency thinking items are scored from one "definitely false" to eight "definitely true," then summed for a total score. Higher scores indicate higher levels of hope.
Financial confidence
Time Frame: 6 months
Two items to assess confidence in household's ability to meet longer term goals and comfort with current financial situation.
Financial-well being (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Financial Well-Being Scale)
Time Frame: 6 months
Each item is scored 0 to 4 and summed to a total. The sum total is then converted to a total response value on the CFPB Financial Well-Being Scale score from 0-100.
Stress and coping (Perceived Stress Scale - 4)
Time Frame: 6 months
Each item is scored from "never" to "all of the time" on a 5-point scale. Scores of 4 items are then summed, yielding a minimum score of 0 and a highest score of 16. Higher scores are correlated to more stress.
Liabilities
Time Frame: 6 months
Eleven items to assess: past 6 month use of shadow banking services (e.g., check cashing, payday loans, auto title loans), late fees charged, spending compared to income, credit score (very bad to very good/I don't have a credit score/I don't know), types of debt, and debt payments.
Housing hardship
Time Frame: 6 months
Three items from the U.S. Census Bureau's Survey of Income and Program Participation to assess rent/mortgage payments, recent eviction, and utility payments/disconnections.
Secondary Outcomes
- Relational finances(6 months)
- Employment status(6 months)
- Subjective financial knowledge(6 months)
- Cryptocurrency knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors(6 months)
- Mastery (Pearlin Mastery Scale)(6 months)
- Food insecurity(6 months)