Georgians teeter on personal financial cliffs

Moderated by Rick Badie

Georgia has endured tough economic times and continues to struggle in the post-recession recovery. A recent report by a nonpartisan think tank offers some perspective on the deep damage incurred to the financial health of our state. I highlight the report’s findings, while two policy analysts outline solutions for greater prosperity.

Georgians: Broke and living paycheck to paycheck

By Rick Badie

Many Georgians are practically broke, living paycheck to paycheck.

Too few of us save for our children’s college education, much less retirement.

And God forbid an emergency slaps us, given that we’re already teetering on a personal financial cliff, just getting by. Many Georgians are one emergency away from financial ruin. So says the Corporation for Enterprise Development, a Washington-based, nonpartisan think tank that focuses on household finances and solutions for low- to moderate-income earners.

The organization recently released the 2013 version of its Assets & Opportunity Scorecard, a ranking of the financial security of 50 states and the District of Columbia. Using dozens of “outcome measures,” the report ranks states in five categories: financial assets and income; housing and home ownership; health care; education; and business development.

Georgia’s overall rank was 50. The Peach State earned Ds in three areas: businesses and jobs, housing and home ownership, and health care. The state fared better in education, netting a C. However, for the second consecutive year, we ranked dead last in assessments that measure the financial security of residents.

Translation: We got an F.

Some highlights of the financial grade:

* 56 percent of residents have practically no savings to cover emergencies or save for the future.

* Less than 50 percent of the workforce saves for retirement.

* 55.8 percent of households are liquid-asset poor, which means they lack the means to cover basic living expenses for three months without income.

* 29.3 percent of Georgia households are asset poor, which means they lack the net worth to subsist at the federal poverty level for three months without income.

* 26 percent of households that earn between $55,000 and $90,000 are liquid-asset poor.

* 35 percent of households in Georgia that earn between $51,061 and $82,992 annually have less than three months of savings.

* 65.2 percent of consumers having sub-prime credit.

* Average credit card debt is $10,077.

No doubt, many of us are just scraping by.

For a fuller picture, read the complete report at http://assetsandopportunity.org/scorecard/.

A path to prosperity: Allow more to save

By Jennifer Brooks

The recession’s lingering effects have taken an enormous toll on Georgia families. A report released last month by my organization, the Corporation for Enterprise Development, revealed more than half — 56 percent — of the state’s residents are living on the edge of financial collapse. They have little savings to fall back on in the event of a job loss, health crisis or other emergency.

What many may find surprising is that this group includes a significant number of families who would consider themselves middle class: 35 percent of households in Georgia earning between $51,061 and $82,992 per year have less than three months of savings.

Living on the edge of financial collapse is unsustainable for Georgia families and is not a path to long-term prosperity for the state. There is, however, much that can be done to write a different ending to the story of financial vulnerability that continues to play out in too many communities.

It is clear that not all Georgia residents start out on an equal footing. Having an inheritance or family support can help people weather bumps in the road and allow them to take advantage of opportunities, such as going to college, buying a home and saving for retirement. Fortunately, public policies can level the playing field for families who aren’t as lucky. The policies Georgia adopt can give families the tools to boost income, reduce debt and save for short- and long-term goals. For example, Georgia should:

Adopt a refundable state Earned Income Tax Credit that allows all working families, even those without tax liability, to benefit. Tax credits help working families boost their income, making it possible to save for emergencies or future needs.

Eliminate policies that penalize families who receive public benefits if they save for the future. Georgia’s cash welfare program limits eligibility to those with less than $1,000 in assets, essentially guaranteeing they will not be able to build a personal safety net of savings and become self-sufficient.

Encourage savings by investing in Individual Development Account programs, which match the deposits dollar-for-dollar of low- and moderate-income families who are saving to buy a home, start a business or go to college.

Expand health insurance coverage to more low-income people. Georgia’s decision not to participate in the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion misses the opportunity to ensure poor adults can get treatment when they are sick. Access to timely medical treatment protects against lost wages and prevents chronic or long-term illnesses that can send a person into debt and ultimately increase costs to the state.

Policymakers should remember their decisions will either set Georgia families up to succeed and put the state’s economy on a path toward greater prosperity, or will sentence more than half of Georgia’s residents to ongoing financial insecurity and little prospect of contributing to the state’s long-term growth. The choice should be an easy one.

Jennifer Brooks is director of state and local policy for the Corporation for Enterprise Development.

Big government can’t solve U.S. problems

By Benita Dodd

One certainty about any state “ranking of opportunity and assets” is that solutions will resemble the blind men and the elephant: a matter of perspective. Proponents of big government suggest government-run solutions and “government” funding. Advocates of limited government propose that individual initiative, ingenuity and philanthropy lead to prosperity.

No resolution has come from government throwing money at a problem. In fact, federal and state spending on means-tested welfare programs in 2011 totaled more than $1 trillion, or more than $61,100 for every family living in poverty. Yet the percentage of Americans living in poverty remains high.

The path out of poverty is not in government programs but in quality education, jobs and families. As crucial as education is to upward mobility, too many children are trapped in substandard schools based on ZIP codes. Those in poor schools and classes, or in schools that don’t meet their needs, should have alternatives: school choice, including scholarships elsewhere, and digital learning. Instead, those who drop through the education system’s cracks end up with limited skills in low-paying jobs, sometimes taking up crime and further burdening society and their families.

While it sounded noble for President Barack Obama to propose in his State of the Union speech that the minimum wage be raised to $9 an hour by 2015, such laws work against job seekers. Nobody wants their fellow Americans to live in poverty, but that is not resolved by mandating the price of labor. That move prices workers out of the job market and encourages businesses to reduce labor instead of expanding, adding workers and creating economic opportunity. For workers with limited skills, it’s tougher to find jobs.

On top of that, onerous government regulations add to the cost of doing business and must be implemented by seizing more money from this nation’s hardworking taxpayers. Among them are professional licensing requirements that increase the number of licensing boards but have no relation to health or safety concerns. These regulations become hurdles to such entry-level jobs as taxi drivers, hair salon employees and landscapers.

The lack of savings is another impediment in climbing the economic ladder. By eliminating the state income tax, Georgia would remove a significant tax on savings for all families, a pro-growth policy that would create more job opportunities. Programs that encourage auto ownership and provide flexibility that public transportation cannot offer also enhances opportunities for well-paying jobs.

Finally, too many low-income families use the emergency room for health care. Many are unable to take time off from their jobs. Calling for Medicaid expansion is no help if these families can’t access an after-hours clinic or a primary-care doctor because of low Medicaid reimbursement rates. It’s smarter to convert Medicaid into premium assistance, allowing families to buy their own private insurance or contribute toward an employer’s health insurance policy.

This nation was built on principles of equal opportunity, not equal outcomes. Government should never be the answer. Georgia must facilitate personal responsibility and a helping hand, not a handout.

Benita Dodd is vice president of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation, an independent think tank.

22 comments Add your comment

Deserttrek

February 21st, 2013
12:48 pm

jennifer dear, you want to take from me because I work and save and give it others. you want to use the power of government to steal. that is evil and to suggest it makes you … in my mind.

Rick

February 21st, 2013
11:43 am

A person whose ONLY tool is a hammer views the world as a place to make dents in. Jennifer has been working in an non-competitive environment for too long, insulated from the growth-stimulating effect of having consequences for her own bad decisions and pronouncements. But she may be right in one respect. If the government is never again going to get out of the way of the free market and is going to continue with the most massive tax burden on business in the free world, with the largest regulatory burden,with a self-rewarding system that pays people more to coast than to produce, then it would be foolish to think that there is any benefit from doing anything except getting as much as possible FROM the existing system until it collapses. Even if Atlas doesn’t shrug, even if we geta long with no one in the world willing to accept dollars forcing us to print more to cover our spending, it won’t be enough. Because the amount that the various politicians have promised to pay to retirements, Social Security, Medicare/caid, healthcare, state and local debts, and on, is more than order of magnitude more than even our horrendous current federal debt. More like $220 trilllion. And they can’t devalue the dollar fast enough to keep up with that coming due. Although they are going to try. So play on Jennifer. Play on. And don’t mind the icebergs.

Former Marine

February 21st, 2013
10:46 am

Like myself, there are many of us who worked their way through college, didn’t take out student loans and didn’t receive assistance from family members so that I could afford my education. Now I have a career, a home that is PAID for, a retirement account all because I made the right choices in life. But the liberal mind states that I should do more to help those who have made terrible decisions in life such as dropping out of school, having children out of wedlock, using drugs, getting a criminal record.

At what point do people take personal respnsibility for the decisions they make in life? According to this, they shouldn’t have to, it should be my responsibility to look after them.

Steve in Tulsa

February 21st, 2013
10:17 am

More theft from the totalitarians! They cannot stand that I am allowed to keep anything I earn. It is beyond Jennifer’s comprehension that people who have stuff earned I by working. She wants to seize what little savings I have and give it to someone who doesn’t even have a job and refuses to work. I earn my money by showing for work every day but totalitarian democrats want to take my meager earnings and give it to people who refuse responsibility for themselves. Jennifer wants me to be stripped of my earnings to give to other people to put in their savings? Hell no. Why doesn’t it ever occur to totalitarians that giving people jobs is what people need. If the totalitarians would drop the job killing regulations from the EPA and NLRB that are driving industries and jobs overseas then they wouldn’t have to seize my earnings. these people cold have jobs if not for the repressive policies of democrats

Mike A.

February 21st, 2013
9:38 am

Mt dad was laid off back in the 70’s while I was in college. The only assistance he got from the government was a few weeks of unemployment. Because he was more interested in supporting his family than scamming the system, it soon became too frustrating to even try to get the benefits he was entitled too. What did he do? He started working out of the back of his pick-up and built his own business that put me through college and supported him and my mother for the next 20+ years (their savings continue to support my mother in retirement). As for me, no scholarships, no student loans, no government subsudues, pay as you go and work between quarters and while going to classes. If there was a government program that actually helped the people it was proposed to help (instead of merely helping to elect or re-elect a politician) folks like me would be more interested in listening to folks like Jennifer Brooks.

Ken Lane

February 21st, 2013
9:18 am

So Jennifer, you want to take from those who have planned well and achieved and give to those who planned poorly or not at all?

I think not. I’m already pissed off at the amount of EIC I see paid out to those who have never paid a dime and get it the money for no other reason than they can’t use birth control.

williebkind

February 21st, 2013
8:24 am

“If the money spent on lotto, beer and cigarettes was put in savings, individuals wouldn’t be living paycheck to paycheck.”

It’s costly to be free and free from other people’s idea of how you should live.

Jack ®

February 21st, 2013
5:36 am

If the money spent on lotto, beer and cigarettes was put in savings, individuals wouldn’t be living paycheck to paycheck.

dave

February 20th, 2013
4:25 pm

With so many bills there is nothing left to save! By bills I mean the necessity & not unnecessary spending like restaurant bills or other frivolous spending.

An observer

February 20th, 2013
2:24 pm

And now they are being forced to spend money they do not have on insurance they cannot afford.