WORD. Seriously, though, if you give people access to capital, they know how to use it. The access part is what's missing from the equation for many people in lower-income neighborhoods. Case study: my roommate (white guy, early 30s) owns the house we live in, the warehouse next door (which contains an aborted food truck and a million bike parts for his dream coffee/bike shop), a house about an hour away that he barely makes ends meet on by renting, and a lease in SF. Motherfucker doesn't have a day job and lives off these investments, though by a somewhat narrow margin, but, notably, got all of these by loans he took out. He knows the game and the game trusts him and his co-signers. Meanwhile, 5 blocks over, there's a dude that rolls around West Oakland on a bike mounted with a modified blender that he pedals to make daiquiris on the spot. This guy makes more profit than my roommate has in years, but lord knows he probably doesn't even have a bank account, much less does he know his way around a loan form that he could probably put to good use. Nothing against my roommate, though, he's just a lil scatterbrained, is all.Welfare buys food, but it doesn't buy dignity.