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Corporate Social Responsibility
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7.08.2008 - 02:36pm ET
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Child Accounts in the UK Show Early Success
New Report from Aspen Institute and Institute for Public Policy Research Analyzes Early Child Findings of Child Trust Fund
(CSRwire) NEW YORK, NEW YORK. - July 8, 2008 - The Aspen Institute's Initiative on
Financial Security (Aspen IFS) and the Institute for Public Policy
Research (ippr) jointly issued a report today entitled "The U.K. Child
Trust Fund: A Successful Launch," highlighting early findings from a bold
U.K. initiative to provide every newborn child with an investment account.
Early analysis of the Child Trust Fund (CTF) program shows: - 75
percent of parents open an account for their children;
- 30 percent of accounts opened by parents receive additional
contributions;
- Low-income families contribute a higher percentage of their income to
their children’s accounts than higher-income families; and
- Equity investing in the private sector is popular with parents and
workable for private financial institutions.
The U.K. program was
implemented in 2005 and made retroactive to cover all children born after
September 2002. Each child receives a certificate to open a private
investment account called a Child Trust Fund (CTF). These accounts have
been opened for the 3.5 million children born in the U.K. since the
program’s inception, and every account is endowed with a £250 ($500)
starter contribution from the government. The account aims to give
children a financial springboard into adulthood at age 18, helping to pay
for anything from a first home to a college education. Aspen IFS has
proposed implementing a similar program in the United States.
"The early success of the Child Trust Fund is inspiring." said Lisa
Mensah, Executive Director of Aspen IFS. "As a country with a persistently
low personal savings rate, we in the U.S. can learn a great deal from the
successes and challenges of this program."
"It's very promising to see that both parents and financial services
providers are responding positively to this bold, unprecedented savings
policy," said Carey Oppenheim, Co-Director of the Institute for Public
Policy Research. "The Child Trust Fund shows tremendous potential for
changing the culture of saving in the U.K., and we look forward to further
analysis as the program continues."
The Aspen IFS-ippr report uses official data from the first few years of
the CTF, together with academic research, to draw some initial conclusions
about the early achievements of the program. The paper sets out some of the
early findings from the UK's experience of CTFs and highlights the key
challenges for other countries that may be interested in implementing a
national universal children's savings program.
To view this report online, please visit www.aspenifs.org.
The Initiative on Financial Security at the Aspen Institute is the
nation's leading policy program focused on cradle to grave savings policy
to help more Americans save, invest and own.
The Institute for Public Policy Research is the UK's leading progressive
think tank, producing cutting edge research and innovative policy ideas
for a just, democratic and sustainable world.
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