The New Thrift
With the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the University
of Virgina, the New America Foundation, and others, the Institute
for American Values is conducting an investigation into the
history and practice of thrift as an American value. Below,
read an op-ed from The Washington Post by Ray Boshara
and Philip Longman of the New America Foundation for a good
statement on some of the project's main themes. Our report,
"For a New Thrift" will be released at a conference
in Washington, DC on May 12-13, 2008. Mark your calendars! We
hope you'll be able to join us! (More details forthcoming.)
Forget Easy Money. Try Saving a Few Bucks.
By Ray Boshara and Phillip Longman
The Washington Post, Sunday, October 7, 2007; Page B03
Countrywide Financial, the nation's largest mortgage lender,
has a curious new idea -- or, more precisely, an old one. No
longer will it use wads of Chinese cash recycled through Wall
Street to make subprime loans to unqualified borrowers. Instead,
it will take in deposits from small savers and lend them out
to people who might actually repay them -- just like that humble
thrift institution president George Bailey did in "It's
a Wonderful Life."
Imagine: a bank that promotes thrift! This could be the start
of something big. Writing recently in the American Banker, Eugene
Ludwig, a former comptroller of the currency, advised financial
institutions to stop relying "on the easy money that comes
from wholesale funding" and to concentrate instead "on
harder-to-get core deposits." How quaint. Remember when
banks actually tried to instill the savings habit by going into
schools and helping kids set up small passbook accounts? Today,
the first experience most younger Americans have with a bank
comes during freshman orientation at college, when they come
across a table laden with giveaways and credit-card applications.
This return to thrift comes none too soon. Not since the Great
Depression have so many Americans lost their homes in one year
-- and we're not even in a recession, at least not yet. But
we're still on course to see 2 million foreclosures in 2007,
afflicting one in 62 households. That's a 67 percent increase
from 2006, according to RealtyTrac. The Federal Reserve's recent
decision to cut its benchmark rate by half a point, while widely
praised on Wall Street, will do little to stop the slide.
Also not since the Great Depression have Americans saved so
little. Even with unemployment at historically low levels, Americans
spent more than they earned in both 2005 and 2006 -- and charged
the difference. Household debt, not including mortgages, now
eats up nearly 15 percent of disposable income -- more than
food and gasoline combined. One in seven families is dealing
with a debt collector. Children today are more likely to live
through their parents' bankruptcy than their parents' divorce.
Americans' stunning lack of savings not only brings personal
tragedy but also is causing the dollar to plummet against all
major currencies, jeopardizing our economic growth and threatening
the financial system worldwide.
What's going on? No doubt, some of us like to shop too much,
but it's also true that the "fixed costs" of middle-class
life have soared. Elizabeth Warren, a professor at Harvard Law
School, shows that while family incomes have gone up in the
past generation, the costs of health care, education, housing,
child care and transportation have risen even higher.
Meanwhile, not only does the government itself borrow as though
there were no tomorrow, primarily through unfunded health and
pension plans, but it promotes what David Blankenhorn
of the Institute for American Values calls "anti-thrift"
institutions. Today, 41 states plus the District of Columbia
and Puerto Rico run lotteries, and 11 states encourage casinos.
Government has also allowed for the mainstreaming of other anti-thrift
institutions -- some charging annual interest of more than 500
percent -- that once existed, if at all, only in the shadows
of society. Payday lenders, rent-to-own stores, auto-title lenders,
some franchise tax preparers and chain pawn shops are all now
as common across the landscape of middle-class America as Applebee's.
After the terrorist attacks of 2001, President Bush told us
that the patriotic thing to do was to shop. But Osama bin Laden
is still out there, gas is more expensive than ever, the credit
card is maxed out and our homes are depreciating. There's a
better way: the old-fashioned virtue called thrift.
Historically, thrift didn't carry its current association of
being cheap or stingy. Rather, it meant the wise use of resources.
It meant an abhorrence of waste, whether of raw materials, time,
energy or money. In short, it meant conservation.
To conserve money, working-class men and women banded together
to create "thrift" institutions. Before these institutions
were deregulated and taken over by the fast-buck crowd in the
1980s, they provided a staid but reliable vehicle for building
a nation of "freeholding" middle-class homeowners
and small-scale entrepreneurs. Most Americans understood, until
the triumph of the anti-thrift institutions, that their own
freedom from wage slavery -- and, indeed, the civic health and
wealth of the republic -- depended on the savings habit and
the widespread ownership of unencumbered small properties that
it makes possible.
Today, by contrast, while many Americans understand the need
to conserve energy and natural resources, they have trouble
seeing what any of that has to do with credit cards and subprime
mortgages. But conserving financial resources is not only still
essential to individual liberty; it is also essential to moderating
wasteful consumption and saving the environment.
Reviving the American thrift ethos won't be easy, and it will
probably take at least a generation. But we can take some small
steps now that would make saving easy, automatic and frequent.
Our goal should be to generate new savers as well as new savings
-- in sharp contrast to current government policy, which allocates
considerably more than $100 billion a year in tax breaks to
high-income earners who would save anyway.
First, we should take advantage of one of the most powerful
forces in human nature: inertia. Studies in behavioral
economics show that when new hires have to opt out
of a 401(k) retirement plan, as opposed to having to opt in,
savings rates skyrocket. Also, building on the "Opportunity
NYC" initiative (which is being privately funded by the
Rockefeller Foundation, New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg
and several other donors), governments, civic-minded corporations
and philanthropies could make automatic savings deposits to
individuals who engage in socially desirable behavior. Finish
high school, volunteer in your community or buy an energy-efficient
appliance, and your savings account receives a deposit.
Technology, if fully exploited, can also make the cost of maintaining
a bank account far lower, thereby giving financial institutions
a greater incentive to serve small savers and giving freedom
to the "unbanked" poor from the gouging fees that
payday lenders charge to cash checks. Imagine that your debit
card is also an interest-paying savings card, to which your
employer, the Internal Revenue Service and other entities can
make automatic deposits. Some innovative firms are already offering
such a product, which combines low cost with convenience and
security.
Meanwhile, regulators should encourage more community-focused
banks, credit unions and thrift institutions. These can resume
their historical role of promoting thrift by helping customers
become savers as well as (eventually) homeowners and small-business
owners.
Congress should do its part as well. The bipartisan New Savers
Act, for example, makes it easier to open bank accounts, buy
savings bonds, put money away for college and receive financial
education. Another bipartisan measure, the Automatic IRA Act,
encourages automatic payroll deposits into IRAs. Other proposals
authorize tax credits for low-income savers, as well as remove
savings penalties for those on public assistance.
Finally, to usher in this "new thrift" across generations,
Congress should establish a lifelong savings account for all
children when they are born -- a reality in Britain and elsewhere
and an idea that's rapidly gaining bipartisan momentum in the
United States.
If you're an American born in the 20th century, thrift probably
strikes you as a musty, downscale word -- reminiscent of used
clothes, aged relatives who wrapped their sofas in plastic or
perhaps the grandmother who saved Green Stamps. But it's worth
remembering, as did generations of Americans struggling up from
poverty and privation, that thrift is still the essential virtue
that makes the American dream possible.
boshara@newamerica.net longman@newamerica.net
Ray Boshara is vice president of the New America Foundation
and Phillip Longman is its Schwarz senior fellow. They are writing
a book on thrift and the American middle class.
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