Abstract: Financial Capability and Asset Building for All: A Grand and Achievable Challenge for Social Work (Society for Social Work and Research 20th Annual Conference - Grand Challenges for Social Work: Setting a Research Agenda for the Future)

452P Financial Capability and Asset Building for All: A Grand and Achievable Challenge for Social Work

Schedule:
Saturday, January 16, 2016
Ballroom Level-Grand Ballroom South Salon (Renaissance Washington, DC Downtown Hotel)
* noted as presenting author
Margaret Sherraden, Professor, University of Missouri-Saint Louis, St. Louis, MO
Jin Huang, PhD, Assistant Professor, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO
Julie Birkenmaier, PhD, Professor, Saint Louis University, St Louis, MO
David Patterson Silver Wolf, PhD, Assistant Professor, Washington University in Saint Louis, St Louis, MO
Christine Callahan, PhD, Research Assistant Professor, University of Maryland at Baltimore, Baltimore, MD
In order to achieve lifetime financial security, people must be financially capable and able to accumulate assets. This panel will provide background and rationale for building financial capability and assets in all households in America, including the most financially vulnerable. This is a necessary and achievable goal. Social work scholars have played a significant role in building a theoretical and empirical base for proposals that can improve financial security. Specifically, this team proposes a three-part strategy: The first is to create a universal, progressive, and lifelong system of asset building that begins with a Child Development Account opened automatically for each newborn, to be used to reach social development goals throughout the life span. The second is to create a web-based Financial Capability Gateway that enrolls people automatically in key financial services and provides financial information and guidance. The third part is preparation for all social workers to engage in culturally- and historically-informed practice to improve household financial management and create policies and interventions for household financial capability. This grand challenge requires the profession to commit to making financial well-being a central goal of practice and research.