Oklahoma Code § 56-253

Title 56. Poor Persons: Legislative findings
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The Legislature hereby finds that:
1.  Americans of most economic classes are having increasing
difficulty climbing the economic ladder.  Fully half of all

Americans have no, negligible or negative investable assets just as
the price of entry to the economic mainstream, such as the cost of a
house, starting a business, an adequate education, establishing a
retirement account, or purchasing an automobile, is increasing;
2.  Economic well-being does not come solely from income,
spending, and consumption, but also requires savings, investment,
and accumulation of assets, since assets can improve economic
stability, connect people with a viable and hopeful future,
stimulate development of human and other capital, enable people to
focus and specialize, yield personal and social dividends, and
enhance the welfare of offspring;
3.  There is an urgent need for new means for Americans to
navigate the labor market and to provide incentives and means for
employment, upgrading, mobility, and retention;
4.  The household savings rate of the United States lags far
behind other industrial nations, presenting a barrier to economic
growth.  The State of Oklahoma should develop policies, such as
individual development accounts, that promote higher rates of
personal savings and net private domestic investment;
5.  In the current fiscal environment, the State of Oklahoma
should invest existing resources in high-yielding initiatives.
There is reason to believe that the financial returns, including
increased income, tax revenue, and decreased welfare cash
assistance, of individual development accounts will far exceed the
cost of investment;
6.  Tens of thousands of Oklahomans continue to live in poverty
and receive public assistance.  Poverty is a loss of human
resources, an assault on human dignity, and a drain on social and
fiscal resources of this state.  Traditional public assistance
programs, concentrating on income and consumption, have rarely been
successful in promoting and supporting the transition to economic
self-sufficiency; and
7.  Income-based social policy should be complemented with
asset-based social policy, because while income-based policies
ensure that consumption needs, including food, child care, rent,
clothing, and health care, are met, asset-based policies provide the
means to achieve economic self-sufficiency and climb the economic
ladder.

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