April 27, 2017

CFPB: Tracking Success | A Core Set of Financial Outcomes for Financial Empowerment Programs

Today, we’re releasing a core set of financial outcomes  to help human services organizations demonstrate the value of building financial empowerment and capability initiatives into their work.

Many of these organizations help people access housing, jobs, emergency assistance, or other services they may need to address crises, achieve economic independence, or build assets. Including financial empowerment in these services can help individuals improve their financial well-being. For example, if an individual knows how to get and read their free annual credit report, that skill may help them improve their credit score which, in turn, may lead to securing a job or an affordable place to live.

To this end, we have developed five core financial capability and empowerment outcomes that can be used across programs to provide a common framework and language for demonstrating success of integrating financial empowerment into existing programs. This core set of recommended financial outcomes is designed to:

As shown in the table below, the five core financial capability and empowerment outcomes we identified are:

  1. Planning and goals
  2. Savings
  3. Bill payment
  4. Credit profile
  5. Financial well-being

We’ve included financial well-being in the core set because it is the ultimate goal of financial empowerment, capability, and education efforts. We have a specific measure for this core outcome: the CFPB Financial Well-Being Scale . This is an outcome measure based on a consumer-derived definition of financial well-being that includes concepts of financial security and freedom of choice, now and for the future.

CORE ONE CORE TWO CORE THREE CORE FOUR CORE FIVE
Planning and goals Savings Bill payment Credit profile Financial well-being
Description Setting up a plan or goal Having savings or habit Improvement in bill paying Improvement in credit profile; thin file or no
score to demonstrated credit history
Individual’s
sense of financial security and freedom of choice
Options for indicators

(not
exhaustive list)

Plan in place
Goal in place
Plan execution
Goal achieved
Active use of plan or
budget
Regularity of savings

Automaticity of saving

Setting up a rainy day or emergency fund

Percent of income saved

Retirement
included

On-time bill payment

Fewer late fees

How person prioritizes if insufficient funds

Fewer late payments/number of delinquent payments

Increase in credit score
or credit quality tier

Alternative data reported, e.g., utility bills (incling for thin or no file consumers)

“Becoming visible”—gaining credit history

CFPB Financial Well-Being Scale

10 item  (standard) version

or

5 item (abbreviated)
version

Source Self- or staff-reported, or tracked Self-reported or account status Self- or staff-reported, or credit report Credit report and/or credit score Self-reported
Level Household or individual Household or individual Household or individual Individual Individual

Building financial empowerment strategies into existing programs will be more sustainable if programs can demonstrate measurable and meaningful financial outcomes alongside their other program objectives. Through these efforts, organizations that provide financial services or support can help those they serve achieve financial well-being.

Learn more about financial empowerment.

This post was originally published here.