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Read this article and answer the question: The article says "myRA . was a long-term investment in national saving.

Read this article and answer the question:  The article says "myRA ... was a long-term investment in national saving." However, according to the system of national accounts that we studied in Lectures 1 and 2, Investment and Saving have different meanings. Explain the difference between how these terms are used in the article vs. in the system of national accounts.

Was myRA Misrepresented? Why the Trump Administration Killed the Program by John Sullivan, Editor-In-Chief January 10, 2019

[T]he reason for the interview, was [Mark Iwry's] role as a principal architect and author of the myRA program, announced during President Obama's State of the Union speech in 2014, only to be discontinued in July 2017. ...

Mark Iwry doesn't like certain descriptions of the now defunct, about-to-be-revived myRA program, a high-profile part of the previous administration's attempt to help Americans save. ...

The Trump administration justified their decision to cancel based on low adoption and high peraccount costs incurred by the government, but Iwry doesn't buy it. ...

"What was reported was simply that the Trump Administration looked at the myRA a little over a year after it had launched, and there were only several tens of thousands of accounts that were funded so far," Iwry explains. ...

But the myRA, he argues, was a long-term investment in national saving, a starter account designed to play out over many years and be used for a variety of purposes—not to be judged prematurely and terminated based on the first year's activity.

One of those purposes was to support the aforementioned federal or state-based auto IRAs.

At the time, California was about to enact its auto IRA program; the only hold-up was the need to reach agreement on the type of default investment in which participants would be placed.

Rather than delay the program entirely while debating the issue, the California legislation was amended to specify that the everyone who didn't opt out would be invested in "United States Treasuries, myRAs, or similar investments" at least temporarily for up to the first three years of the program.

So, a major purpose of the myRA, by 2016, was to serve as a key element of the auto-IRA programs in Oregon, Illinois and California, as requested by those states and probably other states in the future (the auto-IRA was also explicitly required to be offered as an option on state "marketplaces" under legislation signed into law in Washington and New Jersey).

"In the first year of the myRA, 2016, our focus at Treasury was mainly on ensuring we had the capacity to meet the very large expected demand from California, Oregon, and Illinois," Iwry explains. "Far from the supposed low numbers, California officials, in accordance with their legislation, made clear to Treasury that they were interested in using the myRA as their temporary placeholder default investment, or sole investment, for up to three years to auto-enroll 6.8 million workers." ...

However, in the spring of 2017, the Trump White House and/or Treasury realized (or were told) that continuing to make the myRA available to the states' auto IRA programs would be inconsistent with their intent to sign legislation hostile to those programs.

So the Trump Treasury then informed California—as well as Oregon and Illinois—that it was pulling the plug "on the states' plans to promote saving by millions of workings families through myRAs."

Shortly after thwarting the states, Treasury announced that the myRA's expected takeup was small and therefore not worth the cost of continuing.

"That's the real story of the premature demise of the myRA," Iwry concludes. "It was not the flop they made it out to be. Take-up among those just signing up for it on their own was starting slow, but the key point was that, but for Treasury's intervention, millions of myRAs were about to be deployed to help working families start saving in California and other states."

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