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Opportunity and Ownership: Facts

 
 

Publications : Facts

Viewing 1-5 of 21. Most recent listed first.Next Page >>

Financial Help among Family and Friends in Vulnerable Neighborhoods: Part 1: Who Gives? (Article/Opportunity and Ownership Facts)
Author(s): Lynette A. Rawlings, Kerstin Gentsch

Financial assistance from family and friends is an important resource for lower-income families dealing with difficult economic circumstances. This fact examines what percent of respondents in low-income neighborhoods gave financial help, either to family and friends or to other people they live with, in the last 12 months. The percentage of respondents who gave financial help is high 39 percent, with substantial variation within immigrant and U.S.-born respondent groups by race and ethnicity in the proportion that gave and where the assistance was sent

Posted: May 20, 2008Availability: HTML | PDF

Financial Help among Family and Friends in Vulnerable Neighborhoods: Part 2: Who Receives? (Article/Opportunity and Ownership Facts)
Author(s): Lynette A. Rawlings, Kerstin Gentsch

In the second fact we examine what percent of respondents in low-income neighborhoods received financial help in the last 12 months from families and friends or from other people they live with. Overall, 25 percent of respondents received financial help from families and friends. This figure differs substantially by nativity. Moreover, the patterns of receiving help from family and friends are fairly similar across race and ethnic groups for U.S.-born respondents, whereas the percent of immigrant respondents who received help from family and friends differed sizably among region of origin.

Posted: May 20, 2008Availability: HTML | PDF

Older Americans' Reliance on Assets (Article/Opportunity and Ownership Facts)
Author(s): Barbara Butrica

People think of retirement security as balancing on a three-legged stool, with income from assets, private pensions, and Social Security as the legs. However, despite growing awareness about the importance of saving for retirement, many elderly people cannot rely on their financial assets. According to data from the 2004 Health and Retirement Study, lower-income adults age 65 and older rely less on income from assets and traditional defined-benefit pensions than their higher-income counterparts. Instead, older adults with lower income rely primarily on Social Security and public transfers for their retirement security.

Posted: March 18, 2008Availability: HTML | PDF

How Households Expect to Cope in a Financial Emergency (Article/Opportunity and Ownership Facts)
Author(s): Lynette A. Rawlings, Kerstin Gentsch

How households cope with financial emergencies depends largely on the resources at their disposal. Differential access to good financial options affects how much households pay for credit in a time of need, which can vary substantially. Using data from the Making Connections Cross-Site Survey (2002–2004), we examine how households with incomes over $30,000 and those with incomes below $30,000 would respond in a financial emergency and find that in general, higher-income households were more likely to use conventional methods while lower-income households were more likely to use alternative (and often more expensive) methods to pay unexpected bills.

Posted: March 04, 2008Availability: HTML | PDF

Do Assets Change the Racial Profile of Poverty among Older Adults? (Article/Opportunity and Ownership Facts)
Author(s): Barbara Butrica

According to the federal government, elderly poverty rates among blacks are nearly triple and among Hispanics are more than double those of whites. Data from the 2004 Health and Retirement Study on adults age 65 and older, living alone or with only a spouse, show how assets, which are excluded from the official poverty measure, change elderly poverty overall and between racial/ethnic groups. Adding imputed housing rent and annuitized asset values to resources reduced overall poverty by 1.8 percentage points, but increased racial disparities because blacks and Hispanics have relatively little housing equity or financial assets.

Posted: March 04, 2008Availability: HTML | PDF

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