American Dream, In Peril, Is Successfully Pursued Through State Programs
07 Dezembro 2005 - 10:45AM
PR Newswire (US)
Landmark Study Finds State 'Asset Building' Policies Hold Key to
Reducing Poverty in America GAITHERSBURG, Md., Dec. 7 /PRNewswire/
-- Working hard and being employed may no longer be enough to ward
off poverty, according to a study released today by the Sodexho
Foundation and Brandeis University's Institute on Assets and Social
Policy. The study finds that the U.S. has a large contingency of
working poor who do not have sufficient resources to support their
families at a minimum economic standard. The future might be more
promising, however. The study shows that new state policies are
enabling more low-income households to move from poverty to the
middle class by rewarding work effort, enhancing job-related
earnings and providing ways to encourage the accumulation of assets
such as savings and home ownership. The study, Innovative State
Policies to Reduce Poverty and Expand the Middle Class: Building
Asset Security Among Low-Income Households, examines a new domestic
policy framework called "asset building." The framework is based on
the concept that helping people develop financial assets provides
stability and an opportunity to move into the middle class.
"Asset-building is not only an anti-poverty strategy, it helps
families realize the American dream by being rewarded for hard work
through social mobility and economic security," said Dr. J. Larry
Brown, executive director of the Institute on Assets and Social
Policy, and Distinguished Scientist at Brandeis University. "Social
investments encourage the accumulation of assets among the working
poor, such as solid earnings, savings accounts, education and home
ownership, to help reduce poverty in our country." The Sodexho
sponsored research looks at how states apply asset building to new
social policies, and which state programs offer significant
potential. The pioneering research shows that states with both
abundant and lean fiscal resources, with urban and rural
populations and reflecting a variety of ideologies, are
increasingly centering their policies on the assets that residents
need to build educational and technical skills, an income base and
the financial wealth necessary for upward mobility and security.
"Our vision is to eliminate hunger in America, therefore the
Sodexho Foundation is always seeking new ways to address poverty as
its underlying cause," said Stephen J. Brady, president of the
Sodexho Foundation. "Asset building is a universal solution because
it addresses the shared needs and aspirations of households and
promotes initiative." The report classifies state asset policies
with exceptional potential in three categories: * Income, or
creating and preserving an asset foundation; * Human capital, or
strengthening individual capacity; and * Wealth, or building and
securing financial assets. The analysis features these states and
policies: Florida: Minimum Wage and Passport to Economic Progress
Kentucky: State Income Tax Threshold and Adult Education Transition
to Post-secondary Education Kansas: State Earned Income Tax Credit
New Mexico: Unemployment System and Home Loan Protection Act
Arizona: Child Care Subsidies for Working Parents and Phoenix's
Community Initiatives for Financial Independence Arkansas: Career
Pathways, Workforce Improvement Grant Program and Individual
Development Accounts Georgia: HOPE Grant and GoodWorks! Ohio:
Elimination of Asset Tests Louisiana: START Savings Program Utah:
Financial Literacy for Youth and Adults The Sodexho Foundation The
Sodexho Foundation (http://www.helpstophunger.org/) is an
independent charitable organization leading the fight against
hunger by supporting initiatives that focus on eliminating the root
causes of hunger in the U.S. Administrative costs are paid by
Sodexho, Inc. to ensure that 100 percent of donations go directly
to serving those in need. Sodexho USA (http://www.sodexhousa.com/)
is the leading provider of food and facilities management in the
United States, with $6.3 billion in annual revenue and 110,000+
employees. Sodexho USA offers innovative outsourcing solutions in
food service, housekeeping, grounds keeping, plant operations and
maintenance, asset management, and laundry services to more than
6,000 corporations, health care, long term care and retirement
centers, schools, college campuses, military and remote sites in
North America. Headquartered in Gaithersburg, MD, Sodexho USA
proudly serves as the official food service provider for the US
Marine Corps. The Institute on Assets and Social Policy The
Institute on Assets and Social Policy of the Heller School for
Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University generates
policy ideas to broaden wealth, reduce inequality, and improve the
social and economic mobility of low-income American households by
promoting asset building. The institute fulfills its mission
through research, analysis, education and public engagement.
Working in partnership with a wide range of organizations, the
Institute bridges the worlds of academic research, government
policymaking and the interests of constituencies. DATASOURCE:
Sodexho Foundation CONTACT: Jaya Koilpillai-Bohlmann, Sodexho, Inc.
- NYSE: SDX, +1-301-987-4550, Mobile - +1-301-346-1239, ; Keith
Blackman, Burson-Marsteller, +1-202-530-4585, Mobile -
+1-202-494-1017, Web site: http://www.helpstophunger.org/
http://www.sodexhousa.com/
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