Banking the Poor Financial Services, Asset-building & Economic Development: New Public Policy Perspectives for Puerto Rico

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Banking the Poor Financial Services, Asset-building & Economic Development: New Public Policy Perspectives for Puerto Rico October 8, 2004 Michael S. Barr University of Michigan Law School Msbarr@umich.edu 2004 Michael S. Barr, based on Banking the Poor, 21 Yale Journal on Regulation 121 (2004) (references for slides may be found in that text)

Low income families lack access to mainstream financial services 22% of low-income families in U.S. were unbanked (10 million households) in 1998 Growth of working poor Increase in immigrant portion of working poor Concentration of working poor Decline in cross-subsidization/fee-driven But decline in unbanked from 1995 to 1998 (from 25% of low-income households) 50% of Puerto Rico s households were estimated to be unbanked (1996)

Reasons cited for being unbanked Low income High bank account fees High minimum balances for accounts Low check-writing usage Low or no personal savings Distrust/ don t like banks Privacy

Alternative financial services providers that serve the poor Check cashers 400% growth since 1992 to about 10,000 outlets Half of unbanked use to cash checks Fees: Avg. 1.5-3.5% of check (but wide range), 180 million checks, totaling $55 billion, $1.5 billion in fees. 80% payroll checks, 16% government checks. Loss rates under 0.25 percent of face value of check (compared with interbank rate of 0.64 percent). Much less growth in use of check cashers in Puerto Rico than in states

Alternative financial services providers that serve the poor Payday lenders 12,000 providers $2 b in revenue; $12b in loan volume; 65 million loans to 8-10 million households. APR avg. over 470% ($54/2 week/$300 loan) Rollovers repeatedly during year Credit problems & credit histories Federal pre-emption and renting charters

AFS Providers: Refund Anticipation Loans/Tax Preparation Services* Nearly half of $32 billion in EITC refunds to over 18 million families distributed through RALs. EITC recipients pay $1.75 billion in tax preparation, electronic filing & loan fees, not including check-cashing fees. Example for $1500 Refund in Washington DC $100 tax preparation and filing $90 RAL $30 check cashing fee *Based on Berube (2003) Key drivers for RALs unbanked get refunds a month faster; banked 1-2 weeks faster pay off late or mounting bills pay for tax preparation fees from proceeds of refund

Barriers to account ownership Checking products ill-suited to poor High risk overdraft; high fees; minimum balances Problems with accounts in past 7 million in ChexSystem Distribution system (e.g., fewer ATMs per capita in low-income neighborhoods) Unbanked too poor/low profit Lack of documentation (immigrants) Lack of financial education

Costs of Unbanked/Underbanked Basic transaction services expensive (receive income, store value, pay bills) Reduces government transfer programs (e.g. EITC) May decrease WTW & EITC work incentives Harder to borrow on reasonable terms May make it harder to save cushion against short term crises education, homeownership, retirement, or other goals Risk of loss/theft

Should we care? Income transfer requires converting government payment to usable form May lessen government work incentives May reduce savings or access to credit that cushion lowincome families from reliance on government programs or bankruptcy Payment systems externalities Checks vs. debit Off-line vs. on-line ACH bill payment & direct deposit ATM functionality & location Broader social inclusion

Federal steps to increase access to financial services Encourage low-cost, electronically-based products Treasury s ETA (98,000 accounts) & First Accounts Create new tax credit for FIs providing low-cost electronically based accounts EITC, tax refund, and tax preparation reforms Split refunds & encourage direct deposit EITC simplification, filer oversight, e-filing incentives CRA services test Federal Reserve payment system pricing reforms Remittances through ACH ACH pricing for direct deposit & retail bill payment Check truncation under Check 21 Act

Puerto Rico: steps to increase access to financial services Direct deposit of government payroll (28% of working unbanked households in Puerto Rico) Shift EBT for benefits to account-based cards Permit former welfare recipients to retain accounts opened through EBT programs Consider using TANF funds for financial access Linked deposit programs Improve regulation & enforcement of nondepository financial service providers E.g., APR disclosures, rollover limits or minimum repayment periods, but remove anti-competitive requirements (e.g., geographic rules) where they exist Education campaigns Consider local EITC with direct deposit.

Private sector steps Employer-based initiatives Direct deposit, bank accounts, financial education, payroll cards as transition, & payroll savings plans Banks, Thrifts and Credit Unions low-cost, debit-card based accounts, with direct deposit accounts with savings buckets card-based remittances, linked to accounts automatic check-cashing, bill payment, money orders Others debit networks surcharge free alliances for the poor tax preparation services direct deposit to accounts Leapfrogging (cell phones, internet kiosks)

Steps to increase savings Account ownership IDA programs Employer-based savings plans Progressive savings & pension reform Financial education

Conclusion Reaching out to improve access to financial services and savings is still relatively new. Initial efforts suggest policies designed to Induce financial institution involvement Increase access to financial services Increase access to savings vehicles Expanding access to financial services may be important to economic inclusion.