The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Would prizes get you to save?

Premise offered in 29 states sounds good, but few consumers biting.

- By Elaine S. Povich Stateline.org

More states are allowing banks and credit unions to entice customers to build up their savings by offering them lotterylik­e prizes. But even with a chance to win money, most customers still aren’t saving.

Twenty-nine states now permit credit unions or banks to offer “prize-linked” savings accounts, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. This year, Utah enacted a law and Georgia passed a measure that awaits the governor’s signature.

The accounts look a little like a lottery or a raffle, and that’s not by coincidenc­e: They are designed to attract low-income people who are not regular savers but who play the lottery in disproport­ionate numbers.

The savings accounts pay little interest, but every time you deposit a certain amount ($25 in most cases), you become eligible to win prizes. The prizes — up to $10,000 in some states — are a lot bigger than the toaster or other small appliances linked to savings accounts in bygone years, but a lot less than the multimilli­on-dollar lottery jackpots.

Michigan piloted “Save to Win” accounts in 2009. Nebraska, North Carolina and Washington followed suit in 2013. Congress in 2014 passed the American Savings Promotion Act, removing the restrictio­n that barred federally chartered banks from offering prize-linked savings accounts. That prompted more states to take the legislativ­e action necessary to legalize them.

But so far, few people are interested in signing up. A 2018 study of programs in Michigan and Minnesota by the Pew Charitable Trusts (Pew also funds Stateline) found that while 17% of Michigan credit union members had access to “Save to Win” accounts in 2013, only 1.3% of those members actually opened one. The rate was similar at the two Minnesota financial institutio­ns Pew

studied.

Brian Gilmore, senior innovation manager at Commonweal­th, a Boston-based nonprofit that promotes prize-linked savings nationwide and designed Michigan’s program, said the Pew study covered the early years of the program, and that participat­ion may be higher now. He suggested that some customers might be put off by a withdrawal limit, typically once or twice a month.

But Gilmore also noted that Commonweal­th’s research shows that between 11% and 19% of prize-linked account holders said they joined the credit unions for the prize accounts, which indicates that they hold some appeal.

Joseph Nathan Cohen, an associate professor of sociology at CUNY Queens College and an expert in household savings, said people may be reluctant to sign up for prizelinke­d accounts for the same reason they don’t save generally: Those in the bottom-fifth of the income distributi­on don’t have enough money to even consider savings.

Cohen also cited the restrictio­ns on how often the money can be withdrawn and a lack of advertisin­g.

“An unbanked person has very low income and not much in the way of assets,” he said by telephone. “I don’t see why they would lock up a very scarce resource.”

Financial institutio­ns tout the accounts as a “no lose” propositio­n, since your savings are still in the accounts even if you don’t win prizes. Low interest rates on ordinary savings accounts also make the prize-linked accounts, which are also called “Lucky Savers” and “Lucky Lagniappe,” more attractive.

Most of the accounts have interest rates in the same range as regular savings accounts or 12-month certificat­es of deposit.

“It’s pretty appropriat­e to think of them as appealing to consumers’ interest in lotterylik­e products,” said Melissa Kearney, an economics professor at the University of Maryland who has studied prize-linked accounts.

“The expected return is positive, which makes them a better return than lottery tickets. Evidence suggests this is appealing to people, and it will pull people into savings that might otherwise have been gambling or buying lottery tickets instead.”

Modern Americans just don’t save. According to Prosperity Now, a progressiv­e group that tracks income and wealth data, only 58% of U.S. households save for emergencie­s.

And the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., using 2016 data, reported nearly a quarter of American households did not have even $400 in easily accessible savings.

The most recent high in the savings rate for American households was 17.3% in May 1975, according to a Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis study. In March, the rate was 6.5%, the St. Louis Fed reported.

Economists blame the easy availabili­ty of credit for some of the decline, along with the higher costs of necessitie­s like housing and health care.

Commonweal­th and the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston have tried to identify other ways to incentiviz­e savings. In addition to prizelinke­d accounts, they held a seminar to discuss best practices in 2017 a cited a program under which a bank gave $5 to every local thirdgrade­r in 2008.

Ten years later, the report said, among households where a child received the money, the bank saw a 60% increase in customers using their banking services, an 80% increase in deposit balances and a 60% increase in loan balances.

Vermont state Rep. Matt Hill, a Democrat, is sponsoring legislatio­n in his state that would allow both credit unions and banks to offer prize-linked accounts. He said his primary goal is to reach the “unbanked” population: people with no connection to a bank or other financial institutio­n.

“In Vermont, like the rest of the country, there’s a very large number of people who don’t have a savings account,” he said in a phone interview. “If they encounter a $400 car bill, if something else comes up, they don’t have money to cover a situation. I thought it would be a good way to encourage them to build up a savings fund to get them through a month if they need to.”

In 2017, the most recent year for which data is available, 6.5%, or 8.4 million U.S. households, did not have a savings or checking account, according to the FDIC. An additional 18.7% of households were “underbanke­d,” meaning they had a bank account but also used financial services outside of the banking system, from storefront lenders to credit agencies.

Virginia began allowing prize-linked accounts for both banks and credit unions in 2015, but some financial institutio­ns there are just now offering them.

Amanda Habansky, chief operating officer at Peoples Advantage Federal Credit Union in Petersburg, Virginia, said only 20 union members have signed up for the accounts so far, but that may be because Peoples Advantage hasn’t done a lot of advertisin­g.

“Some of the money has been moved over from other savings accounts; some has come from other financial institutio­ns. Some has come from direct deposit, and it’s money that would have gone out the door or to the real lottery,” Habansky said. “Instead, we’re creating a savings habit.”

 ?? CHRIS SEWARD / NEWS & OBSERVER (RALEIGH, N.C.) 2013 ?? In 2017, 6.5%, or 8.4 million U.S. households, had no savings or checking account, according to the FDIC. An additional 18.7% of households were “underbanke­d,” meaning they had a bank account but also used financial services outside of the banking system, from storefront lenders to credit agencies.
CHRIS SEWARD / NEWS & OBSERVER (RALEIGH, N.C.) 2013 In 2017, 6.5%, or 8.4 million U.S. households, had no savings or checking account, according to the FDIC. An additional 18.7% of households were “underbanke­d,” meaning they had a bank account but also used financial services outside of the banking system, from storefront lenders to credit agencies.

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