More American companies are turning to a new way of convincing employees to save more for retirement: make them do it.
Companies from
Apache Corp. to Google Inc. to Credit Suisse Group AG have boosted the
percentage of worker paychecks automatically diverted to 401(k) plans
well above the long-held standard of 3%.
Some
are setting aside as much as 10% of their workers’ money or
automatically increasing the amounts by 1% a year unless employees opt
out. But not all are matching the increased savings with company
contributions.
Millions of
Americans aren’t putting enough money aside for retirement, despite
reforms designed to bulk up nest eggs and encourage employees to sock
away more.
There are
incentives for companies to urge more-aggressive savings. They want to
ensure they can make room for younger employees and aren't left with an
aging workforce that doesn’t have enough money “to retire and move on,”
said Douglas Fisher, Fidelity Investments’ head of policy development on
workplace retirement.
Houston
oil producer Apache was among the companies to test out higher rates.
It boosted its automatic employee contribution to 8% in 2012 as it tried
to attract new workers. Its 401(k) costs have increased by between $4
million and $5 million annually as Apache matched the full amount for
employees, executives say, but roughly 97% of its employees now
participate.
“If
I put in less than 8%, I’m throwing money away,” said Chris Lurix, a
44-year-old Apache systems analyst in Houston, who cited the company’s
willingness to match the higher savings rate as a partial reason why he
took a job there three years ago.
About 40% of working households
with those aged between 25 and 64 have no retirement savings, according
to a study released last spring by the nonprofit National Institute on
Retirement Security. For those that do, the median balance for
households with workers approaching retirement age is $104,000, a rate
that experts say is one-fifth of an ideal balance, based on a retirement
age of 67.“The typical American household has almost nothing saved for retirement,” said Nari Rhee, manager of the retirement-security program at the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment.
Many employers in recent decades shed costly retirement obligations by eliminating traditional pensions that guarantee a set payout for life and replacing them with tax-deferred 401(k) plans where employees are largely responsible for saving and investment choices.
Millions of new savers joined 401(k) plans but companies enrolled most participants at a 3% savings rate, partly because of guidance from the Internal Revenue Service in 1998. Companies were long reluctant to take a bigger chunk out of paychecks for fear of stirring employees’ ire or taking on higher costs if they matched the larger contributions.
Companies softened that stance as they recovered from the 2008 financial crisis and looked to attract new workers. Large money managers also lobbied employers to be more aggressive.
The number of plans with contribution rates above the old default rate climbed to 40% for the first time in 2013, according to the latest data available from the Plan Sponsor Council of America, compared with 23% in 2006. More are currently discussing moves higher, according to industry consultants and money managers.
Google began boosting its automatic savings rate in its 401(k) plan from 4% in 2008 to 6% in 2010, according to retirement researcher BrightScope Inc.. It now enrolls employees at 10%. John Casey, Google’s director of international benefits, said in a statement that the company wants “Googlers saving for the long-term so they can have the retirements they want.”
Fidelity, Vanguard Group and other large money managers also benefit by collecting more fees on assets under management. Fidelity manages accounts for 13 million 401(k) investors across 21,000 plans, and Vanguard manages retirement accounts for 3.6 million people and 1,900 plans.
Companies
that have bumped up the default savings rate say they’ve been surprised
by the lack of pushback from employees, who are free to lower their
savings rate or opt out of the automatic increases.
Credit
Suisse braced for complaints last year when it upped its initial
automatic savings rate for new employees to 9% from 6%. It did so after
years of experiencing lackluster interest from the firm’s roughly 8,500
employees—specifically younger workers—in the U.S. when meeting to
discuss increasing retirement savings, said Joseph Huber, chairman of
the bank’s pension-investment committee.
But
Mr. Huber said the bank heard concerns from only two people, who
weren’t previously putting any money into their 401(k) plans. Credit
Suisse also decided to automatically increase the default rate by 1% a
year until an employee reaches 15%. It doesn’t match contributions up to
the highest rate, although it contributes $3,000 to $10,000 for each
employee annually.
“It’s companies’ biggest fear and it was radio silence,” he said.
Jeffrey
Barnett, a 24-year-old clinical research assistant at Ohio State
University who makes about $28,000 a year, said some of his co-workers
grumbled at the university’s 10% default savings rate. But it doesn’t
bother him.
“It has definitely put employees in a good position, whether or not they feel that way from the start,” Mr. Barnett said.
Culled from The Wall Street Journal
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