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MyMoney Resources - Life Events
Displaying 191 - 200 of 397
Agency Owner: Federal Trade Commission
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Planning a funeral is an emotional experience. These practical tips can help.
Agency Owner: Federal Trade Commission
Document Type:
Information Source:
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This article provides an overview of bank-based financial education. The role of banks more generally is reviewed, and examples of Marshall and Isley (M&I) Bank's Consumer Education (CE) program are discussed. Evaluation methods used by M&I are described. Key factors for success include clearly defined priorities, a standardized high-quality curriculum, appropriately designed delivery, well-integrated assessment and evaluation, effective community partnerships and a willingness to provide supporting tools.
Agency Owner: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Document Type: Article
Information Source: Case study
Date:
The U.S. Department of the Treasury and U.S. Department of Agriculture convened the National Research Symposium on Financial Literacy and Education on October 6-7, 2008 in Washington, DC. Twenty-nine experts from the fields of behavioral and consumer economics, financial risk assessment and financial education evaluation were invited to summarize existing research findings, identify gaps in the literature, and define and prioritize questions for future analysis. Participants included academics from public and private universities and scholars and administrators from non-profit organizations and government officials. Numerous individuals also attended as observers. This document summarizes the proceedings of the symposium. The two-day symposium featured four discussion groups on the topics of behavior theory application, consumer economic socialization, financial education and program evaluation, and financial risk assessment.On day one, participants presented key research findings in their assigned topic area and outlined the most pressing research gaps. A discussion with the whole group followed. On day two, topic area groups met separately to prioritize key research questions in their respective topic area. The decisions made by each team were reported to the whole group. The total group then discussed and agreed upon ten recommended research priorities.
Agency Owner: Department of the Treasury
Document Type: Conference Proceedings
Information Source: Discussion
Date:
This report was prepared to provide background on the “Bank On” model, a new approach for expanding access to safe, affordable financial services for unbanked households. The purpose of this report is to describe the landscape of Bank On programs, their origins, and their context within a broader financial access field. The report provides basic information about Bank On programs that currently exist, including information about program
structure, partnerships, and funding as well as an assessment of successes, challenges, special
considerations and gaps in the field. Information for this report comes from several
sources: a Bank On program survey, research and information gathered for NLC’s publication, Bank On Cities:
Connecting Residents to the Financial Mainstream, research and analysis from CFED’s
forthcoming publication on the role of financial institutions in Bank On programs, conversations with Bank On program staff and research from experts in the field, including the Center for Financial
Services Innovation (CFSI), the New America Foundation, the Brookings Institution, the U.S.
Department of the Treasury, and others. The report describes the overall financial access field, the emergence and growth of Bank On initiatives,
details about the structure of existing programs, direct and indirect benefits and outcomes, key
components of successful programs, challenges facing the Bank On field, and opportunities for
expanding the reach and effectiveness of Bank On within the context of comprehensive financial
access initiatives.
Agency Owner: Department of the Treasury
Document Type: Report, Article
Information Source: Survey data, Literature review, Focus groups and/or interviews
Date:
This paper tests for the presence of age and gender discrimination in the loan underwriting process. We modify the tools used during the past exams to test for racial discrimination and apply them here to test for the presence of disparate treatment on the basis of age and gender. Using HMDA data along with data from 18 fair lending exams recently conducted by the OCC, between1996 – 2001, we find no evidence of systematic discrimination on the basis of age or gender. Further, the tools used and tested for in this analysis are now readily available for use in future fair lending exams.
Agency Owner: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Document Type: Working paper
Information Source: Administrative data
Date:
We evaluate laws designed to protect borrowers from foreclosure. We find that these laws delay but do not prevent foreclosures. We first compare states that require lenders to seek judicial permission to foreclose with states that do not. Borrowers in judicial states are no more likely to cure and no more likely to renegotiate their loans, but the delays lead to a build-up in these states of persistently delinquent borrowers, the vast majority of whom eventually lose their homes. We next analyze a "right-to-cure" law instituted in Massachusetts on May 1, 2008. Using a difference-in-differences approach to evaluate the effect of the policy, we compare Massachusetts with neighboring states that did not adopt similar laws. We find that the right-to-cure law lengthens the foreclosure timeline but does not lead to better outcomes for borrowers.
Agency Owner: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Document Type: Working paper
Information Source: Administrative data
Date:
The Community Financial Access Pilot (CFAP) began in 2008 and was implemented through December 2009 by the U.S.
Agency Owner: Department of the Treasury
Document Type: Report
Information Source: Case study
Date:
This article provides a brief overview of the field of financial education and explores some of the challenges and potential solutions. The author describes developments in the contemporary financial education movement since the 1990s and the background economic changes
that stimulated its growth; reviews currently available financial education initiatives for youth and adults and discusses the evidence about
its effectiveness as well as broader challenges for the field. The article concludes by highlighting both general and specific examples of efforts to move the field forward.
Agency Owner: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Document Type: Article
Information Source: Literature review
Date:
The exact cause of the massive defaults and foreclosures in the U.S. subprime mortgage market is still unclear. This paper investigates whether a particular aspect of borrowers' financial literacy—their numerical ability—may have played a role. We measure several aspects of financial literacy and cognitive ability in a survey of subprime mortgage borrowers who took out mortgages in 2006 or 2007 and match these measures to objective data on mortgage characteristics and repayment performance. We find a large and statistically significant negative correlation between numerical ability and various measures of delinquency and default. Foreclosure starts are approximately two-thirds lower in the group with the highest measured level of numerical ability compared with the group with the lowest measured level. The result is robust to controlling for a broad set of sociodemographic variables and not driven by other aspects of cognitive ability or the characteristics of the mortgage contracts. Our results raise the possibility that limitations in certain aspects of financial literacy played an important role in the subprime mortgage crisis.
Agency Owner: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Document Type: Working paper
Information Source: Survey data
Date: