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THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON June 14, 1998 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM: GENE SPERLING BRUCE REED SUBJECT: Individual Development Accounts On Wednesday, the Senate Labor subcommittee will mark-up the Human Services reauthorization bill. Besides Head Start and LIHEAP reauthorization, the Committee is planning to include a demonstration of Individual Development Accounts. Given your record, we believe that you should get out in front on this issue and we should either endorse the proposal (with some modifications) or propose our own IDA demonstration. For many years, you have strongly supported Individual Development Accounts (IDAs) as a means to build assets among lower-income Americans, help move people from welfare to work, expand homeownership opportunity, increase access to post-secondary education, and help people start their own businesses. Indeed, nearly six years ago -- in September 1992 -- you announced your support for IDAs, saying that they "would encourage poor Americans to set money aside in special savings accounts that they can use for a home, their education, their training or starting a small business." To that end, your 1994 Welfare Reform proposal included an IDA proposal and the 1996 Welfare Reform law allowed States to use welfare funds to establish IDAs. However, the Federal government has yet to provide direct funding to create IDAs. This memo lays out three potential options for the Administration: (1) endorse the Coats-Harkin IDA demonstration bill; (2) put forward our own Coats-Harkin-like IDA proposal with a higher price tag; or (3) propose a narrower IDA demonstration for just homeownership. Coats-Harkin IDA Demonstration Bill: Senator Coats and Senator Harkin are the lead sponsors of a bill which would establish a four- year, $100 million IDA demonstration under which State and local agencies and/or non-profits would be funded to operate IDA programs. The demonstration would be open to households that are either eligible for welfare (TANF) or have an income level below the EITC phase-out point and a net worth below $10,000. For each dollar deposited into the IDA by a low-income family, the administering agency would provide a match of not less than 1:1 and not more than 8:1. Individuals could make qualified withdrawals from the IDA for only three purposes: (1) purchase of a first home, (2) post- secondary educational expenses, or (3) starting a new business. The Coats-Harkin bill gives a preference to entities that are able to attract pledges of substantial non-Federal, especially private sector, funding to serve as a match for the Federal dollars. And to determine whether this demonstration works, the bill requires that there be a rigorous evaluation of the program.