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An Assets Perspective to the War on Poverty: Access to Higher Education

Money and Education
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Over the past week, we鈥檝e been taking a look at what we鈥檝e learned since the War on Poverty began about why assets matter 鈥 and why they should be a key piece of our anti-poverty approach going forward. On Monday, Hannah Emple examined the relationship between assets and health, and on Tuesday, Elliot Schreur discussed how assets are essential to economic mobility. Today, in the final installment of our series, I鈥檒l explore why assets matter for education 鈥 and how we can do better.

As we鈥檝e noted in our other posts, the world has changed drastically since President Johnson鈥檚 presidency 鈥 and higher education is no exception.聽 A far greater proportion of Americans are attaining college degrees today than they were fifty years ago, but at a drastically higher price. Tuition and fees for higher education have skyrocketed, at private and public institutions alike, leaving the average graduate with in debt. A 1964 graduate of the , for example, would have paid about $6732 in today鈥檚 dollars for tuition and fees 鈥 compared to $51,144 for the class of 2017. Financial aid is increasingly distributed based on 鈥渕erit,鈥 , creating yet another barrier for low-income students. Meanwhile, a college education has for finding work.

The result? Rather than being the higher education is in fact perpetuating inequality and exacerbating racial wealth disparities.

Systemic reforms that make higher education more affordable will be essential to reversing this trend. But asset building interventions also have a role to play, particularly given mounting evidence that having a savings account set aside for college, in the student鈥檚 name, dramatically and completion. It turns out it鈥檚 not just actual affordability, but perceptions of affordability that matter, and savings can instill a among students who might otherwise see college as out of reach.

So how can policymakers put this research into practice? First, by establishing automatic, universal children鈥檚 savings accounts. This idea has long been a priority of the Asset Building Program, and recent state initiatives show that it works. In San Francisco, students have opened savings accounts since 2010 through the program. More recently, Cuyahoga County seeded with $100 for all 15,000 of the county鈥檚 kindergarteners. By starting the savings process early, and embedding these accounts within the school setting, programs like these are hoping to increase the odds of college attendance for all students.

Second, states can bolster their existing college savings vehicles, 529 accounts, by making them work better for lower-income families. As my colleague Rachel Black outlined earlier this week, 529s as currently designed generally benefit only wealthy households. To make these accounts more effective and inclusive, she explains, they should be universal, automatic and .

Higher education remains a gateway to opportunity and upward mobility. But over the past fifty years, just getting in the door has carried a tremendous and ever rising price tag. To keep a degree within reach for all students, the next generation of anti-poverty policy needs to provide structures, incentives and opportunities to develop savings for higher education.

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Aleta Sprague

Fellow, Family-Centered Social Policy

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An Assets Perspective to the War on Poverty: Access to Higher Education