Emergency Savings among Persistently Poor Households: Evidence from a Field Experiment

Author:

Roll Stephen1,Despard Mathieu2,Grinstein-Weiss Michal3,Bufe Sam4

Affiliation:

1. Washington University in St. Louis PhD, is research assistant professor, Social Policy Institute, Brown School, , St. Louis, MO, USA

2. University of North Carolina PhD, is associate professor, Department of Social Work, , Greensboro, NC, USA

3. Social Policy Institute, Brown School, Washington University in St. Louis PhD, is Shanti K. Khinduka Distinguished Professor, , St. Louis, MO, USA

4. Washington University in St. Louis MS, is statistical data analyst II, Social Policy Institute, Brown School, , St. Louis, MO, USA

Abstract

AbstractLow-income households struggle to accumulate emergency savings, which increases economic vulnerability in the face of unexpected events like expensive car repairs. This vulnerability may be even greater among persistently low-income households, which might benefit most from building emergency savings using tax refunds. This study examined the effects of randomly assigned behavioral interventions that incorporated a choice architecture manipulation and savings-related messages aimed at encouraging refund saving and delivered through a free, online tax-filing software program. The study sample comprised 4,536 tax filers, including 1,235 with persistent low incomes. Using administrative tax data and data from a two-wave household financial survey, regression-adjusted treatment impacts were estimated using intent-to-treat analysis to examine whether filers had any of their tax refunds still in savings and how much of their refund they still had saved six months after filing their taxes. Results indicated directional but nonstatistically significant increases in these savings outcomes across three treatment groups for the full sample, yet statistically significant treatment effects among the persistently low-income subsample, effects that were moderated by the prefiling absence of emergency resources. These results suggested that tax-time savings interventions are most effective among low-income households with the greatest needs for emergency savings.

Funder

Department of the Treasury

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference68 articles.

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Decisions Affecting Choices: Current State and Future Directions for Applied Choice Architecture Research in Economics;Review of Behavioral Economics;2024

2. Application of TOPSIS Algorithm in Tax Online Filing System;2023 3rd International Conference on Smart Generation Computing, Communication and Networking (SMART GENCON);2023-12-29

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