Hatching A Nest Egg Plan
April 7, 2002 The Cleveland Plain Dealer by Elizabeth Auster
At first glance, Stephen Brobeck's crusade sounds pathetically modest.
All he's asking is that Americans agree to try to save at least $10
a month. In exchange, he's willing to provide a free half-hour session
with a financial planner (1-800-647-6340).
But don't be fooled by the limited scope of this offer that Brobeck,
a former professor at Case Western Reserve University, announced last
week at a Washington press conference.
Brobeck, who is now executive director of the nonprofit Consumer
Federation of America, actually has something much grander in mind -
something many Americans might laugh off as a fantasy as they sip their
frappucinos, steer their SUVs and stock up on DVDs.
What Brobeck really wants, he confesses, is nothing less than to "change the culture" of our debt-addicted nation.
In the new American culture he envisions, saving money actually
would be cool. So cool that the vicious cycle of credit-card spending
that spun out of control in the '90s would finally end.
Instead, a new ethos would take hold. Parents would urge their kids
to save. Schools would offer lessons in saving. Employers would offer
numerous savings plans for retirement, and encourage workers to use
them. Journalists would report extensively on Americans' savings
habits. And politicians would talk constantly about the importance of
saving.
A tall order? Brobeck doesn't deny it.
But he would rather not dwell on the considerable obstacles he
faces: an economy that offers ever more sophisticated products through
ever slicker advertising campaigns; a credit industry that markets ever
more high-interest credit cards to people who can't afford them; a
popular culture that increasingly promotes instant gratification and
constant stimulation.
You don't need to go further than your nearest pro sports game with
its nonstop bombardment of noisy sideshows, or your nearest movie
theater with its nonstop barrage of special effects, to realize that we
have become a nation increasingly unaccustomed to the virtues that go
along with saving - virtues like quiet, patience and reflection.
Without an appreciation for such virtues, how can we expect people
to take the time to sit down and sort out how to improve their
finances? Especially when that entails painful concepts like delaying
gratification today for greater rewards tomorrow?
Brobeck's answer: Americans have already shown themselves capable of
changing attitudes toward smoking and drunken driving. So why not
saving?
Hence his five-year crusade, with the help of the Ford Foundation
and others, to devise a grand plan for changing America's culture of
debt. The most visible results of his efforts so far are a fledgling
national program called America Saves (www.AmericaSaves.org) and a
year-old experimental program in Cleveland known as Cleveland Saves,
which is serving as a laboratory for the national program.
The Cleveland program matches up people who want to save with
"wealth-building coaches" who give them advice and moral support. Since
it began, he says, 1,400 people have signed up, drawn by workshops,
radio ads, billboards and promotional efforts by local employers and
financial institutions. Similar programs are being planned, he says, in
another nine cities.
Where the effort leads will depend on how many more people show
interest, and on how much support the consumer federation continues to
get from foundations that have financed its effort. Ideally, Brobeck
says, he would like to change enough Americans' attitudes so that a
majority become focused on saving. His estimate now is that only about
40 percent of Americans could be considered savers.
How to change the minds of tens of millions of Americans? One way,
he says, is to focus on the positive message that even Americans with
modest incomes can set aside enough money to build substantial nest
eggs. Too many Americans don't even try, he says, because they
mistakenly believe that only people with high incomes can afford to
save.
Another strategy is partly semantic: Instead of inviting people to
workshops on paying off debts, they're invited to sessions on "building
wealth" - an approach that has proven more enticing.
Brobeck says he and his colleagues are learning as they go what
people seem to need to change their attitudes toward saving. The notion
of offering free half-hour financial- planning sessions was born in
Cleveland (local residents can call 216-781-8090), he says, when it
became apparent that many people seeking help had questions more
complicated than their "wealth-building coaches" could answer.
Brobeck doesn't pretend he's found a sure-fire formula yet for
achieving his goal. For now, he says Cleveland remains an experimental
lab. And if it doesn't work?
"This is a big country and the culture doesn't change easily," he
says. "What drives us is that no matter how successful we are, we know
we are helping many individuals."
Elizabeth Auster is a senior writer in The Plain Dealer's Washington, D.C., bureau.
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