Financial Services and Education Project: Latest Articles

Too Small To Fail

Last fall, Countrywide Financial, then the nation's largest mortgage lender, had a curious new idea --or, more precisely, an old one. No longer would it slush foreign capital through Wall Street to make subprime loans. Instead, the lender would depend entirely on deposits from savers who would finance one another's mortgages--kind of like that humble thrift institution run by George Bailey in the movie It's a Wonderful Life.

Sadly, Countrywide waited too long to get back to basics and became the first major bank of 2008 to… more

Phillip Longman, Ellen Seidman | USA Today | October 21, 2008

Breaking Asset Poverty

In standard U.S. policy-speak, “poverty” is an income concept. The “poverty line” is an income measure, access to social programs is largely related to income, and when policymakers examine distributional effects of a policy, they turn to income quintiles.

Income, however, provides an incomplete picture of family well-being. Income measures a household’s flow of funds, but that flow can be interrupted. In his recent book High Wire, Peter Gosselin presents disturbing evidence that income volatility in the United States--measured by the percentage of households experiencing a 50-percent decline… more

Ellen Seidman | Shelterforce Magazine | September 16, 2008

Making a Transaction and Savings Account a Certainty, Just Like Taxes

In the Feb. 20 issue of Paybefore Update, my colleague, Melissa Koide, discussed a proposal to use prepaid cards to deliver tax refunds through a unique alliance of government and industry, Viewpoints: A Convergence of Opportunities: Delivering Prepaid Accounts at Tax Time (February 2008). We believe the prepaid sector can and should play a major role in working with government to provide an "assets and transactions account" (ATA), a low-cost, high-value transaction account that facilitates savings for… more

A Convergence of Opportunities: Delivering Prepaid Accounts at Tax Time

What if there’s a way to bring prepaid products to millions of new consumers, with the help of the federal government?

I think there is. By leveraging billions of dollars in annual tax refunds, there’s the potential to deliver a prepaid product that benefits consumers, industry and the government alike. Called the Assets and Transaction Account, or ATA for short, it’s envisioned as a network branded prepaid account that would be delivered through the tax filing process and loaded with tax… more

Melissa Koide | PayBefore.com | February 21, 2008

Viewpoint: Fed's Mortgage Move is a Good Start

With foreclosures reaching record levels and predictions for further trouble ahead, the Federal Reserve Board on Tuesday unanimously approved potentially sweeping changes to how mortgages are marketed, made, and serviced, especially in the nonprime market. Will the Fed be able to meet its goal of a "comprehensive set of protections to consumers" when the comments come flying?

The proposed revisions to regulations under the Truth in Lending Act are designed to realign relationships in the mortgage business, so borrower and lender… more

Ellen Seidman | American Banker | December 21, 2007