Family assets and child outcomes: evidence and directions.

4区 法学 Q1 Social Sciences
Michal Grinstein-Weiss, Trina R Williams Shanks, Sondra G Beverly
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引用次数: 45

Abstract

For poor families, the possession of assets--savings accounts, homes, and the like--has the potential not only to relieve some of the stress of living in poverty but also to make a better future seem like a real possibility. If children in families that own certain assets fare better than children in families without them, then helping poor families build those assets would be an effective strategy for two-generation programs. Indeed, write Michal Grinstein-Weiss, Trina Williams Shanks, and Sondra Beverly, plenty of evidence shows that assets are connected to positive outcomes for poor children. For example, young people who have any college savings at all, even a very small amount, are more likely to go to college; children in households with assets score higher on standardized achievement tests; and children of homeowners experience fewer behavioral problems. But this evidence comes from longitudinal data sets and is therefore correlational. Looking for causal relationships, the authors examine the results of experimental programs that opened various types of savings accounts for poor people and matched their contributions. Several of these trials included a control group that did not receive a savings account, making it possible to attribute any positive outcomes directly to the savings accounts rather than to their owners' personal characteristics. These programs dispelled the myth that poor people can't save; participants were generally able to accumulate savings. It's too early to tell, however, whether assets and asset-building programs have long-term effects on children's wellbeing, though one experiment found positive impacts on disadvantaged children's social-emotional development at age four. The most promising programs share several features: they are opened early in life; they are opened automatically, with no action required from the recipients; and they come with an initial deposit.

家庭资产和儿童结局:证据和方向。
对于贫困家庭来说,拥有资产——储蓄账户、住房等——不仅有可能减轻生活在贫困中的压力,而且有可能使一个更美好的未来成为现实。如果拥有某些资产的家庭的孩子比没有这些资产的家庭的孩子表现得更好,那么帮助贫困家庭建立这些资产将是两代人计划的有效策略。迈克尔•格林斯坦-韦斯、特里娜•威廉姆斯•尚克斯和桑德拉•贝弗利写道,事实上,大量证据表明,资产与贫困儿童的积极成果有关。例如,有一点大学储蓄的年轻人,即使是很少的储蓄,也更有可能上大学;有资产家庭的孩子在标准化成就测试中得分更高;房主的孩子也很少有行为问题。但这一证据来自纵向数据集,因此是相关的。为了寻找因果关系,作者研究了一些实验项目的结果,这些项目为穷人开设了各种类型的储蓄账户,并匹配了他们的贡献。其中几项试验包括一个没有储蓄账户的对照组,这使得有可能将任何积极的结果直接归因于储蓄账户,而不是其所有者的个人特征。这些项目打破了穷人无法储蓄的神话;参与者通常能够积累储蓄。然而,现在判断资产和资产建设项目是否对儿童的健康有长期影响还为时过早,尽管一项实验发现,资产和资产建设项目对弱势儿童在四岁时的社会情感发展有积极影响。最有前途的程序有几个特点:它们在生命的早期就开始了;它们是自动打开的,不需要收件人的任何操作;他们需要付首期定金。
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来源期刊
Future of Children
Future of Children Multiple-
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期刊介绍: The Future of Children is a collaboration of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and the Brookings Institution. The mission of The Future of Children is to translate the best social science research about children and youth into information that is useful to policymakers, practitioners, grant-makers, advocates, the media, and students of public policy. The project publishes two journals and policy briefs each year, and provides various short summaries of our work. Topics range widely -- from income policy to family issues to education and health – with children’s policy as the unifying element. The senior editorial team is diverse, representing two institutions and multiple disciplines.
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