The New Wealth Agenda: A Blueprint for Building a Future of Inclusive Wealth

Katherine Lucas McKay

Associate Director, Insights and Evidence

Shehryar Nabi

Senior Research Associate

Among the truly urgent crises facing the United States is widespread household financial insecurity. A stunning 51% of U.S. households have expenses that are at least equal to—if not greater than—their income, and 55% lack the necessary savings to weather a simultaneous income drop and expense spike. And the bottom 50% of the population holds just 3% of the nation’s wealth. To effectively address the financial precarity engulfing millions of U.S. households, we need a bigger, bolder response that can both serve as the primary organizing principle for the great work on financial security that is happening across the nation and galvanize more people to get involved.

In The New Wealth Agenda: A Blueprint for Building a Future of Inclusive Wealth, the Aspen Institute Financial Security Program offers a goal that is equal parts ambitious and achievable: By 2050, we must increase by ten-fold the wealth of households of color and those in the bottom half of the wealth distribution in the United States. In the report, we identify the eight objectives that we believe are the most effective path forwardfor reaching that goal. We also pinpoint the critical indicators to track and assess our collective progress toward creating the conditions of financial security and well-being that will enable full participation, agency, and dignity in our economy, and a new future of wealth.

To achieve this transformation, leaders across the private and public sectors need to take bold and focused action across a wide range of fields relevant to wealth-building. To help leaders become part of the solution to enable a financially secure future, we offer The New Wealth Agenda as a guide and an invitation to work to meet this urgent goal together.


Data Correction (May 10, 2023): A previous version of this report inaccurately stated that median retirement assets among those with any retirement savings were $21,000 for the bottom half and $229,000 for the top half of the wealth distribution in 2019. It also mislabeled the year for its estimate of the percentage of cost-burdened renters as 2022. The current version of the report has corrected these errors.

Blog Posts

A Persistent Challenge: How Financial Shocks Continue to Undermine Family Financial Security

Most households experience at least one financial shock in a given year, but there are few comprehensive solutions to help them. How can we solve this persistent challenge?

Blog Posts Videos

Video: We Don’t Have to Choose Between Financial Stability and Wealth

Households need tools that help them afford everyday life and build long-term security. Too often, policy systems fail to respond to both of these needs and instead prioritize one goal over the other.

A woman holds a microphone while speaking on an event panel.
Publications

Five Forces of Change Shaping the Next Decade of Inclusive Finance

What will the U.S. financial system look like in 10 years? To find out, read our report on the first Aspen Leadership Forum on Inclusive Finance.

Blog Posts

Trump Accounts Are Here–Now Let’s Make Them Work for the Kids Who Need Them Most

Trump Accounts were signed into law. Now, private and public sector need to work together to make sure these early wealth building accounts help low-income families.

Genevieve Melford sits in the Ideas 20 letters on the Aspen campus.
Blog Posts

It’s Time to Connect Financial Security and Economic Policy

Aspen FSP Managing Director Genevieve Melford looks to the future of financial security work and economic policy.

Karen Biddle Andres and Jason Ewas present at a forum.
Blog Posts

Lessons from Expert Roundtables on Designing an Effective Early Wealth Building Policy

Aspen FSP recently convened a series of roundtables on early wealth building policy. Here’s what we’ve learned.

Blog Posts

How the National Strategy for Financial Inclusion Can Improve Public Benefit Delivery

The Strategy outlines opportunities to improve benefits delivery, particularly through government provided or purchased financial products and services.

Publications

4 Models for Investing in Inclusively Owned Commercial Real Estate

Four case studies that take a deep dive into four distinctive CRE Models pioneered by our cohort.

Blog Posts

How We Can Make Universal Early Wealth Building Accounts a Reality

Universal early wealth building accounts have the potential to transform household wealth in the U.S.—and they have bipartisan support.