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Gavin Newsom

Gavin Newsom

Posted: March 9, 2010 10:53 AM

Independent Financial Guidance Key to Making Americans "Financially Fit"

What's Your Reaction:

When you trace the roots of the record-busting foreclosure rate and the havoc that has wrought on the American economy over the last few years, San Francisco's mailboxes probably don't come to mind as a logical starting point. But they should.

Those mailboxes are where major banks first sowed the seeds of our current economic problems. Nearly fifty years ago today, over 100,000 people in San Francisco came home after work to find in their mail revolutionary plastic squares called "credit cards." At the time, banks were fighting a losing battle to sell this new product by trying to transform savings-conscious Americans into more credit-friendly consumers. In a last-ditch effort to win consumers over, bank executives staged a "credit card drop," blanketing the city with access to free credit cards.

It worked. A new, viral culture of debt emerged overnight. Starting with basically no cards in the 1950s, there are now over 640 million credit cards in circulation in the U.S. -- about three for every adult -- and nearly $1 trillion in outstanding credit card debt. Another $1.5 trillion is now owed on other debt products.

Yet, household debt in itself is not the cause of our economic problems.

Fact is, we are in this economic mess today because of a more fundamental problem: few people know how to effectively use financial products, whether they provide debt or savings. Just like the credit cards San Franciscans and other Californians found in their mailboxes 50 years ago, mortgages and other products never come with easy-to-read instructional manuals, carrying punishing consequences for ill-informed consumers with no access to independent financial advice.

If there is one lesson we can take from the foreclosure crisis and its disastrous ripple effects, it's that we must democratize access to sound and unbiased financial guidance, something only 20 percent of households -- mostly wealthy -- have access to. Just as Americans started handing over their wrenches in the 1950s when their cars became too difficult to maintain, today they must turn to professional guidance to help take care of their accounts.

You go to your mechanic to maintain your car--a highly sophisticated combination of steel and transistors -- and you go to a vast network of medical specialists to maintain your physical and mental health. Shouldn't we place a similar priority on maintaining financial health?

We think so. That is why San Francisco, the city where the bank-driven credit spiral took root, will be the first city in the country to provide unbiased, independent financial guidance to all of its residents by staging a "financial guidance drop." Over 1 million people today will receive an invitation to HelloWallet, a new web-based financial guidance service that has attracted support from the Rockefeller Foundation, Walter & Elise Haas Fund, and Levi Strauss Foundation. Independent from banks and capable of providing personalized guidance for the price of a cup of coffee, the service will help us put millions of dollars back in San Franciscan pockets by putting banks to work for our residents.

We are joined by a broad group of San Francisco's leading institutions, including foundations, unions, businesses, and non-profits who will work together over the next year to help make San Francisco one of the most financially fit cities in the country.

This is a problem that we can solve by working together and changing the way we get ahead. In the 1950s, that game-changer was a piece of plastic. Today, we are hopeful that it is independent financial guidance available to all.

Gavin Newsom is the Democratic Mayor of San Francisco

José Cisneros is the Treasurer of San Francisco

 

Follow Gavin Newsom on Twitter: www.twitter.com/GavinNewsom

 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kimj29
12:38 PM on 03/10/2010
As far as I'm concerned, Newsom is doing his job - offering residents of SF (which I am) valuable information that can improve their lives. Knowledge is power, and Newsom is taking steps to provide people the information they need to take some control over their financial lives. There may very well be other products that do what HelloWallet does for free, but I'm willing to bet that there are many thousands of people out there who don't know anything about any of them. Now that Newsom has written this article they do. Who and how Newsom's campaign was financed is a total red herring, and has nothing to do with him providing good information to people who can use it. I'm sick of all the sour grapes out there - this is something that can help people like me - trying to make a decent living in an expensive city - and should be regarded as such! Thank you Gavin Newsom!
05:38 PM on 03/10/2010
Writing an ad for a company that offers services that others offer for free is hardly the mayor "doing his job". I also live in SF and Newsom has been a disaster for SF. More vacations than GW Bush, taking credit for others hard work (Healthy SF, rainy day fund, Tidal power, etc) He is an incompetent opportunist like many ,many other politicians and this PR ad piece is yet another example. My question is who does he know who works for this company? That would be interesting to know
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kimj29
06:57 PM on 03/10/2010
Again,the job you think Newsom is doing as Mayor is irrelevant. You are shooting the messenger and completely disregarding the message. HelloWallet is an innovative, low-cost financial tool that's available to people who can't or don't want to pay a financial advisor - democratizing financial information and making it available to the masses, regardless of income. Plus, they are pledging to donate the service free of charge to 1 of every 5 subscribers. I don't know about any of the supposedly free financial advice services that are out there, but I do know that I've read quite a bit about this service and it seems like an exceptional tool. Newsom heard about it through the Clinton Global Initiative by the way, and that org is doing extraordinary work on poverty issues throughout the world, so frankly I don't blame Newsom for looking into HelloWallet and deciding to jump on the bandwagon.
06:47 AM on 03/10/2010
Over the last decade or longer, most "professionals" that mange mutual funds have done worse than simply buying an S&P500 index fund and this has not done much better than a savings account but with much more risk? The whole debt pyramid economic model is a ponzi scheme. Total private debt is now 300% of GDP with the fastest growing segment being financial debt (Wall Street 30-1+ leverage)! House of cards.

Root cause is compound interest. It allows rich people their free lunch as they sit back and "live on the interest". Of course, provided assets (houses) are appreciating so people can take on more debt. Now this is no longer occurring, debt destruction and deflation (depression) are the only way out, made slower and immediately less painful only by govt spending, the debtor of last resort.

It's mathematically impossible for this to continue without depressions being compound interest grows exponentially, economies do not. We seemed to have reached the point where debt can no longer continue to grow so like Madoff, the jig may well be up.

Since 1960 and accelerated in 1980, private debt has increased virtually every year from 40% of GDP in 1960 to 300% now at $47 trillion. Without ever increasing debt, there would have been virtually no growth in GDP or employment. The only way to keep the system going is by inflating asset prices like housing and stocks and fancy ways to increase debt (hello derivatives).
02:34 PM on 03/09/2010
Excuse me but San Francisco faces a second straight year of 500 million dollar deficits and Newsom has no solutions about City finances but to try and run for Gov (he quit) and now run for Lt Gov just to get away from having to do any real work. His campaigns were bankrolled by his family friends the Getty's and Fischer's (they also financed his business and loaned him the money for his first home). his dad's friend Willie Brown appointed him to his first two City posts and made hi a city supervisor. This guy has a lot of nerve and no credibility to lecture on finances when he's never had to deal with the real world.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
World Citizen
10:51 AM on 03/10/2010
In addition, his 'article' is a brazen advertisement for HelloWallet.

Hey, other companies are already offering this and for free...

The reason for our economic mess is outsourcing, offshoring and foreign H1B workers and San Francisco knows no bounds of these. I should know. I lived in San Francisco for 22 years. I sold my house in Jordan Park, near Laurel Heights in 2000 cause I couldn't compete against outsourcing and foreign H1B workers anymore. I moved to europe in 2000. So, Gavin if you're reading the comments, here is mine : "You can do better than this article that you put out."
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
GlenParked
04:09 PM on 03/10/2010
Here, here...we've recently endured a significant raise in MUNI rates (along with cuts to service) and now they're considering yet another. I cannot keep up with the ongoing surge in parking meter rates. Parking fines are on a continual rise and the city has meter maids combing the outlying neighborhods ticketing for the felonious offense of parking the wrong direction on quiet residential streets. Mayor Newsom, many, many people are suffering through this economy, not just the city government. But as most folks are scrambling and cutting back so they can do with less, your administration seems to believe there is justification in collecting more, through whatever means is convenient. I've just been made aware of a new attack on open carports via the building dept...how many ill-gotten gains will you collect from landlords, many of whom are struggling with an alarming vacancy rate? Your solutions to San Francisco's economic woes may seem to be good for the city government, but they don't do much for San Franciscans...maybe you should take a look within City Hall and deal in an honest way with its finances before you deign to insinuate yourself into the bank accounts of your constituents.