Changes in Retirement Policies and Solutions
Needed
October 20, 2009 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - A new report
says that although the trend toward greater individual
responsibility for retirement security will undoubtedly
continue, there is much that employers, financial
institutions, and the government can do to modernize their
retirement policies and solutions in order to help Americans
achieve a secure and dignified retirement.
The McKinsey & Co. study debuts a "Retirement
Readiness Index" which finds that the average American
family faces a 37% shortfall in the income they will need
in retirement - a savings gap of $250,000 per household at
the time of retirement - taking into account expected
payouts of Social Security and pensions, as well as
personal savings including 401(k) and other retirement
plans. While middle and lower income households are least
prepared, most Americans - even middle to higher income
households - will fall well short of their retirement
expectations, according to the study report.
McKinsey's analysis indicates that a consistent focus on
four policy principles could enable the average American
family to reduce their retirement readiness gap by nearly
half, injecting over $3.5 trillion in incremental assets
into the retirement system over the next decade.
The four principles are:
-
Improving the accessibility of retirement
plans,
-
Increasing plan participation and savings rates
for all Americans, especially lower and middle income
households,
-
Helping Americans to better manage their
in-retirement risks in order to draw a stable
"retirement paycheck," and
-
Enabling Americans to work longer.
According to the report, 40 million American households
do not have access to a workplace retirement savings plan -
in most cases because the employer, often a small business,
finds it too costly and administratively cumbersome to
provide a plan to employees. These households could turn to
IRAs to prepare for their retirement; however, fewer than
20% do.
The report says access to workplace retirement plans is
an important driver of retirement preparedness. While the
average American household with access to a DC plan will
have about 70% of the income required for retirement, a
similar household
without access will have to live on approximately 55% of
the required income - and the gap only increases for lower
income households.
The McKinsey study contends that with the right
encouragement, the access problem could be solved. Although
creating incentives for smaller businesses to provide
broader access to retirement plans is important, universal
coverage through a vehicle such as an auto-IRA would be
most impactful, the report suggests. In addition, adding
auto features that default individuals to contribute to
their IRAs every year would have a tremendous impact,
especially for lower income households.
"Over one- third of households with access to a
qualified retirement plan do not take advantage of it, and
those who do participate - including the relatively
affluent - do not contribute nearly enough," the McKinsey
report contends.
The Pension Protection Act was a first step toward
increasing participation and savings rates in retirement
savings plans by including auto-enrollment as a condition
for fiduciary safe harbor. However, the report says
further steps must be taken to ensure appropriate savings
rates and reduce leakage, such as revising the default
rate for automatic deferrals upward and implementing
auto-escalation of deferral rates.