Children’s Savings Accounts (CSAs) are interventions that seek to build assets for children to use as longterm investments (Goldberg, 2005; Sherraden, 1991), particularly for postsecondary education. Provided
through financial institutions, CSAs generally include progressive features, such as initial seed deposits,
financial incentives for attaining certain academic benchmarks, or matches for savings deposits (e.g., Elliott
& Lewis, 2014). Distinct among financial aid policies for their cultivation of improved outcomes
throughout children’s lives, CSAs aim to equip children, particularly those who are disadvantaged, with
assets that have demonstrated associations with academic achievement (Elliott, Kite, O’Brien, Lewis, &
Palmer, 2016) and educational attainment (Elliott, 2013; Elliott & Beverly, 2011). CSAs also connect
households to mainstream financial institutions (Friedline, 2014), activating families to save for their
children’s futures and their later financial well-being.