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Category: National News

Washington, DC - In his State of the Union address, the President made clear that more Americans should have the ability to save for retirement at work – and the ability to take their savings with them as they move from job to job. While Social Security remains a rock-solid guaranteed benefit that every American can rely on, Americans are increasingly responsible for their own retirement security.

No longer do many workers spend their entire career with one company that will provide them a pension in retirement. Rather, as traditional notions of work and lifetime employment change, too many Americans risk not having the resources to enjoy their retirement after a lifetime of hard work. These changes require us to rethink and rework our safety net to better protect workers.

The President’s proposals – which will be detailed further in his FY2017 Budget – aim to ensure near universal access to workplace retirement savings accounts and put us on a path to a more portable retirement benefits by testing what works. That includes steps to:

o   Enabling small businesses to come together and create pooled 401(k) plans, at lower cost and with less burden than going it alone;

o   Automatically enrolling workers without access to a workplace plan in an IRA;

o   Providing tax credits for small businesses that begin offering retirement plans, or choose to automatically enroll workers in existing plans; and

o   Allowing long-term, part-time workers to participate in their employer’s plan.

o   Piloting innovative, more portable approaches to provide retirement and other important employment-based benefits;

o   Evaluating existing portable benefits models, and examining the feasibility of greater change; and

o   Helping workers find lost or missing retirement accounts from prior jobs.

Expanding Access to Workplace Retirement Accounts

Access to workplace retirement savings plans is key to workers’ future economic security.  Today, one out of three workers does not have access to a retirement savings plan, including half of workers at firms with fewer than 50 employees and more than three-quarters of part-time workers. In addition, contractors and temporary employees are often unable to participate in employment-based plans. Workers without access to a plan at work rarely save for retirement: fewer than 10 percent of workers without access to a workplace plan contribute to a retirement savings account on their own. 

The President’s proposals would provide more than 30 million people with access to workplace retirement savings options. The proposals would encourage and enable more employers to offer plans such as a 401(k), while creating alternative savings arrangements so workers can save for retirement at work even if their employer does not offer a plan.

In addition to encouraging employers to offer traditional retirement plans such as a 401(k), the Administration has taken steps to increase the availability and use of IRAs and help workers save by automatically enrolling them in these accounts.

Increasing Portability of Retirement Savings

As we work to expand coverage to more hard-working Americans, we also need to apply the best of American innovation to reinventing our benefits programs to ensure that workers in an increasingly mobile economy can carry their benefits with them across an entire career – or for some workers, across multiple employers at the same time. The Affordable Care Act was a huge step forward, relieving the “job lock” that our health insurance system had created for too many. Now when you return to school, or launch a business, you’ll still have healthcare coverage.

But much work remains to ensure retirement benefits are as mobile as today’s workforce. At present, workers who have a workplace retirement savings plan may have to manage a number of retirement accounts left over from prior employers, save in an IRA to which their employer will not contribute, or complete an often burdensome process to move their 401(k) balances from job to job, assuming their new job allows it. 

Good ideas in this area and on portable benefits more broadly have been raised on both sides of the aisle, but new models enabling workers to take their retirement benefits and other important employment-based benefits from job to job are still in their infancy. Today’s proposals are designed to lay a foundation for a future expansion of benefits by developing models that work and, once proven, can be taken to scale. That’s why the President proposes to:

Employees should at least be able to consolidate savings from a prior 401(k) into their new 401(k) rather than amassing a stack of accounts throughout their lifetime, but the process of rolling over can be burdensome, and workers often receive bad advice about what to do with their savings. That’s why the Administration has taken the following steps under its own authority to promote rollovers between retirement plans and enable people to more easily keep track of their retirement savings.

The federal government’s own retirement plan – the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) – is also making it easier for federal employees to roll their prior 401(k) savings into their TSP account. This June, the TSP will issue a request for proposals to, among other things, eventually facilitate rollovers to the TSP by making the service provider, not the participant, responsible for shepherding rollovers.