Congressional Republicans’ idea of giving every newborn a $1,000 investment account is an obvious political ploy that doesn’t nearly make up for the damage that President Donald Trump’s other policies are doing to working-class families. The proposal is half-hearted, the amount is too small and the name of the accounts is unecessary.
But it’s still a good idea.
Under the “big beautiful” spending bill passed by House Republicans early Thursday morning, every baby born from the start of this year to Dec. 31, 2028 would receive $1,000 that would be invested on their behalf in financial markets in a special new account named after Trump.
The recipients could withdraw the money later in life for certain expenses such as paying for college, buying a house or starting a small business.
Let’s work through the objections first. First, like the “senior bonus,” the so-called Trump Accounts are clearly meant to distract from the fact that the Republican bill would cut food assistance for hungry children, kick millions of Americans off Medicaid, reduce taxes on the wealthy and raise them on the poor, and blow a $3 trillion hole in the deficit, possibly leading to the end of American economic dominance.
To which my response is: Yeah, and?
The fact that it’s an obvious political gimmick doesn’t really affect whether or not it’s a good idea. Neither does the fact that it’s tucked into a bill that is otherwise bad. In fact, the proposal borrows the basic framework from a “baby bonds” proposal that Democratic Sen. Cory Booker and Rep. Ayanna Pressley pushed unsuccessfully throughout President Joe Biden’s administration that was widely praised on the left as a way to reduce the racial wealth gap while boosting working-class families of all races.
Under the Booker-Pressley proposal, every child would get $1,000 in a savings account and as much as $2,000 more each year up to age 18, depending on the family’s income. By contrast, the Trump accounts only include the initial $1,000 deposit, though parents could add up to $5,000 a year of their own money up to age 18.
Those seemingly minor changes make a huge difference.
If a lower-income family added no money to their Trump account, after 18 years that $1,000 would have grown to around $2,000, if we assume a generous 4% rate of return. That’s about enough to pay for textbooks, maybe, but not college. Even if they waited until age 30 to use it to buy a house or start a business, it would still only be around $3,000, which would cover your title fee and some other side costs, but otherwise not help much.
By comparison, a poor kid with a Booker-Pressley account would have more than $50,000 at age 18 and more than $85,000 at age 30 — literally life-changing amounts of money.
Not only do the proposed Trump Accounts not help poor kids, they might actually disadvantage them further.
By allowing parents to contribute, Trump Accounts would end up helping wealthier families more. Assuming a family put the maximum $5,000 per year into the account, that would add up to more than $130,000 at age 18 and more than $210,000 at age 30. You can’t necessarily call those life-changing amounts, however, since the only kids who end up with that much are those whose parents already had enough means to set aside $5,000 a year.








