鈥淐reating a Financial Stake in College鈥 is a four-part series of reports that focuses on the relationship between children鈥檚 savings and improving college success. This series examines: (1) why policymakers should care about savings, (2) the relationship between inequality and bank account ownership, (3) the connections between savings and college attendance, and (4) recommendations to refine children鈥檚 savings account proposals. This series of reports presents evidence from a set of empirical studies conducted by Elliott and colleagues on children鈥檚 savings research, with an emphasis on low-income children, relevant to large-scale policy proposals.
presents additional evidence of a link between savings and children鈥檚 college progress. College progress is conceptualized here as students being 鈥渙n course鈥 for achieving the American Dream via the education path. 鈥淥n course鈥 is operationalized as being enrolled in or having graduated from a two-year or four-year college by age 23. This report offers evidence of the role children鈥檚 savings plays in reducing 鈥渨ilt鈥. Wilt occurs when children who have not yet graduated from high school, but who expect to graduate from college sometime in the future, are not currently enrolled and have not graduated from college shortly after high school. Thus, these children 鈥渨ilt鈥 due to lack of resources as a growing plant loses vitality due to lack of sun and water. If children who expect to graduate from college are more likely to actually attend college when they have savings, we can consider financial barriers rather than a lack of desire as a critical barrier in the path to a college degree.
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Report I in the series, Why Policymakers Should Care about Children’s Savings, is available .
Report II in the series, Does Structural Inequality Begin with a Bank Account? is available .