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What's In It For Me?

by Julie Siwicki of the Financial Access Initiative

In mid-June the Stanford Social Innovation Review blogged the results of a survey they conducted. The survey’s purpose: to understand the role of academic research in the work of practitioners in a broad range of social, environmental and economic issue areas. Many of the 1,800 respondents described academic research as difficult to access, expensive, too narrow, and not relevant...

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Under-savers Anonymous: A US Chapter?

by Julie Siwicki of the Financial Access Initiative

As a field researcher collecting data for the US Financial Diaries project in Cincinnati, I interviewed 30 low-income families about the details of their household finances over 16 months. One question was always in my mind: What’s the difference between their financial lives and mine? And how might this comparison help design financial products for people who are struggling to make ends meet?

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Bad Data

by Thea Garon of the Financial Access Initiative

At FAI, we’re big advocates for data. Why? Because you can’t make good policy without data. Data can be collected in many ways and come in many forms: transaction records, panel surveys, financial diaries, or field experiment results.  We get excited about the opportunity to collect or analyze data about the financial behavior of poor households...

 

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