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How "baby bonds" could help close the wealth gap

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    There is a narrative,
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    an idea that with resilience,
    grit and personal responsibility
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    people can pull themselves up
    and achieve economic success.
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    In the United States
    we call it the American dream.
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    A similar narrative
    exists all over the world.
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    But the truth is that the challenges
    of making this happen
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    have less to do with what we do
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    and more to do with the wealth position
    in which we are born.
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    So I'm going to make the case
    that the United States government,
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    actually that any government,
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    should create a trust account
    for every newborn
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    of up to 60,000 dollars,
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    calibrated to the wealth
    of the family in which they are born.
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    I'm talking about an endowment.
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    Personal seed capital,
    a publicly established baby trust,
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    what my colleague William Darity
    at Duke University and I
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    have referred to as baby bonds,
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    a term that was coined by the late
    historian from Columbia University,
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    Manning Marable.
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    The reason why we should create
    these trusts is simple.
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    Wealth is the paramount indicator
    of economic security and well-being.
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    It provides financial agency,
    economic security to take risk
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    and shield against loss.
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    Without capital, inequality is locked in.
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    We use words like choice, freedom
    to describe the benefits of the market,
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    but it is literally wealth that gives us
    choice, freedom and optionality.
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    Wealthier families are better positioned
    to finance an elite, independent school
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    and college education,
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    access capital to start a business,
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    finance expensive medical procedures,
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    reside in neighborhoods
    with higher amenities,
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    exert political influence
    through campaign finance,
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    purchase better legal counsel
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    if confronted with an expensive
    criminal justice system,
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    leave a bequest
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    and/or withstand financial hardship
    resulting from any number of emergencies.
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    Basically, when it comes
    to economic security,
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    wealth is both the beginning and the end.
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    I will frame this conversation
    in the context of the United States,
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    but this discussion
    applies virtually to any country
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    facing increasing inequality.
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    In the US, the top
    10 percent of households
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    hold about 80 percent
    of the nation's wealth
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    while the bottom 60 percent
    owns only about one percent.
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    But when it comes to wealth,
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    race is an even stronger predictor
    than class itself.
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    Blacks and Latinos collectively
    make up 30 percent
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    of the United States population,
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    but collectively own about seven percent
    of the nation's wealth.
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    The 2016 survey of consumer finance
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    indicates that the typical black family
    has about 17,000 dollars in wealth,
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    and that's inclusive of home equity,
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    while the typical white family
    has about 170,000.
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    That is indicative
    of an absolute racial wealth gap
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    where the typical black household
    has about 10 cents for every dollar
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    held by the typical white family.
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    But regardless of race,
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    the market alone has been inadequate
    to address these inequalities.
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    Even in times of economic
    expansion, inequality grows.
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    Over the last 45 years,
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    wealth disparity
    has increased dramatically,
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    and essentially, all the economic gains
    from America's increase in productivity
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    have gone to the elite
    or the upper middle class.
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    Yet, much of the framing
    around economic disparity
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    focuses on the poor choices
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    of black, Latino and poor borrowers.
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    This framing is wrong.
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    The directional emphasis is wrong.
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    It is more likely that meager
    economic circumstance,
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    not poor decision making
    or deficient knowledge,
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    constrains choice itself
    and leaves people with no options
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    but to turn to predatory finance.
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    In essence, education
    is not the magic antidote
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    for the enormous inherited disparities
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    that result from laws,
    policies and economic arrangement.
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    This does not diminish
    the value of education.
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    Indeed, I'm a university professor.
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    There are clear
    intrinsic values to education,
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    along with a public responsibility
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    to expose everyone
    to a high-quality education,
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    from grade school
    all the way through college.
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    But education is not the panacea.
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    In fact, blacks who live in families
    where the head graduated from college
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    typically have less wealth
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    than white families
    where the head dropped out of high school.
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    Perhaps we overstate
    the functional role of education
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    at the detriment of understanding
    the functional role of wealth.
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    Basically, it is wealth
    that begets more wealth.
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    That's why we advocate for baby trust.
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    An economic birthright
    to capital for everyone.
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    These accounts
    would be held in public trust
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    to be used as a foundation
    to an economically secure life.
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    The concept of economic rights
    is not new nor is it radical.
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    In 1944, President Franklin Roosevelt
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    introduced the idea
    of an economic Bill of Rights.
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    Roosevelt called for physical security,
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    economic security,
    social security and moral security.
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    Unfortunately, since
    the Nixon administration,
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    the political sentiment
    regarding social mobility
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    has radically shifted away from
    government mandates to economic security
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    to a neoliberal approach
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    in which the market is presumed
    to be the solution for all our problems,
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    economic or otherwise.
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    As a result, the onus of social mobility
    has shifted on to the individual.
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    The pervasive narrative is
    that even if your lot in life is subpar,
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    with perseverance and hard work
    and the virtues of the free market,
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    you can turn your
    proverbial rags into riches.
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    Of course, the flip side
    is that the virtues of the market
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    will likewise sanction those
    that are not astute,
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    those that lack motivation
    or those that are simply lazy.
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    In other words, the deserving poor
    will receive their just rewards.
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    What is glaringly missing
    from this narrative
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    is the role of power and capital,
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    and how that power and capital
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    can be used to alter the rules
    and structure of transactions and markets
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    in the first place.
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    Power and capital become self-reinforcing.
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    And without government intervention,
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    they generate an iterative cycle
    of both stratification and inequality.
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    The capital finance provided by baby trust
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    is intended to deliver a more
    egalitarian and an authentic pathway
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    to economic security,
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    independent of the family
    financial position
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    in which individuals are born.
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    The program would complement
    the economic rights to old-age pensions,
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    and provide a more comprehensive
    social security program,
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    designed to provide capital finance
    from cradle all the way through grave.
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    We envision endowing American newborns
    with an average account of 25,000 dollars,
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    that gradually rises
    upwards to 60,000 dollars
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    for babies born into the poorest families.
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    Babies born into the wealthiest families
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    would be included as well
    in the social contract,
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    but they would receive a more
    nominal account of about 500 dollars.
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    The accounts would be federally managed
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    and they would grow at a guaranteed
    annual interest rate
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    of about two percent per year
    in order to curtail inflation cost,
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    and be used when the child
    reaches adulthood
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    for some asset-enhancing activity,
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    like financing a debt-free
    university education,
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    a down payment to purchase a home,
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    or some seed capital to start a business.
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    With approximately four million babies
    born each year in the US,
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    if the average endowment of a baby trust
    is set at 25,000 dollars,
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    the program would crudely cost
    about 100 billion dollars a year.
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    This would constitute
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    only about two percent
    of current federal expenditures
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    and be far less than
    the 500-plus billion dollars
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    that's already being spent
    by the federal government
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    on asset promotion
    through tax, credits and subsidies.
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    At issue is not the amount
    of that allocation,
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    but to whom it's distributed.
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    Currently, the top
    one percent of households,
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    those earning above 100 million dollars,
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    receive only about one third
    of this entire allocation,
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    while the bottom 60 percent
    receive only five percent.
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    If the federal asset-promoting budget
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    were allocated
    in a more progressive manner,
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    federal policies could be
    transformative for all Americans.
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    This is a work in progress.
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    There are obviously many details
    to be worked out,
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    but it is a policy proposal
    grounded in the functional roles
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    and the inherited advantages of wealth,
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    that moves us away
    from the reinforcing status quo
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    behavioral explanations for inequality
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    towards more structural solutions.
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    Our existing tax policy
    that privileges existing wealth
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    rather than establishing
    new wealth is a choice.
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    The extent of our dramatic inequality
    is at least as much a problem of politics,
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    as it is a problem of economics.
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    It is time to get beyond
    the false narratives
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    that attribute inequality
    to individual personal deficits,
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    while largely ignoring
    the advantages of wealth.
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    Instead, public provisions of a baby trust
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    could go a long way towards eliminating
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    the transmission of economic advantage
    or disadvantage across generations
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    and establishing a more moral
    and decent economy
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    that facilitates assets, economic security
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    and social mobility for all its citizens.
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    Regardless of the race
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    and the family positions
    in which they are born.
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    Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
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    Chris Anderson: Darrick.
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    I mean, there's so much
    to like in this idea.
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    There's one piece of branding around it
    that I worry about,
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    which is just that right now,
    trust-fund kids have a really bad rap.
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    You know, they're the sort of
    eyeball-rolling poster children
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    for how money, kind of,
    takes away motivation.
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    So, these trusts are different.
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    So how do you show people in this proposal
    that it's not going to do that?
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    Darrick Hamilton: If you know
    you have limited resources
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    or you're going to face discrimination,
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    there's a narrative that, well,
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    the economic returns
    to investing in myself
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    are lower than that of someone else,
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    so I might as well enjoy my leisure.
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    Of course, there's another
    narrative as well,
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    so we shouldn't get caught up on that,
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    you know, somebody who's poor
    and going to face discrimination,
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    they also might pursue
    a resume-building strategy.
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    The old adage, "I have to be
    twice as good as someone else."
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    Now, when we say that,
    we never ask at what cost,
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    are there health costs
    associated with that.
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    I haven't answered your question,
    but coming back to you question,
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    if you know you're going to receive
    a transfer at a later point in life,
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    that only increases the incentive
    for you to invest in yourself
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    so that you can better use that trust.
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    CA: You're giving people
    possibilities of life
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    they currently cannot imagine having.
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    And therefore the motivation to do that.
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    I could talk with you
    for hours about this.
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    I'm really glad you're working on this.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How "baby bonds" could help close the wealth gap
Speaker:
Darrick Hamilton
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:36

English subtitles

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