Policy Proposals Could Help Tackle Retirement Savings Shortfalls

EBRI examines the potential effects several legislative motions would have on projected retirement savings.   


Implementing a package of legislative proposals and industry innovations would significantly help reduce retirement deficits and enhance participants’ retirement security, according to new issue brief from the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI).

EBRI Director of Research Jack VanDerhei, using the EBRI Retirement Security Projection Model (RSPM), examined the effects of five policies in the brief, titled “Impact of Various Legislative Proposals and Industry Innovations on Retirement Income Adequacy.”

The five solutions EBRI analyzed were 1) implementing the Automatic Contribution Plan/Arrangement (ACPA) proposal, which would generally require employers with more than five employees to maintain an automatic contribution plan/arrangement, typically an automatic individual retirement account (IRA); 2) enhancing the Saver’s Credit, which would replace the current Saver’s Credit with a 50% government match on contributions of up to $1,000 per year; 3) instituting a student loan debt match, where individuals could receive an employer match to their retirement plans for any payments they make to a student loan; 4) assuming a “skinny” 401(k) plan, a deferral-only 401(k) plan allowing annual contributions up to $6,000, with annual catch-up contributions of $1,000, after age 50; and 5) creating full automatic portability in plans allowing participant accounts from a former employer to automatically be combined with a new employer’s plan.

VanDerhei’s analysis found that for households that are projected to have a retirement deficit, combining two proposals—the ACPA provisions and enhanced Saver’s Credit—would reduce retirement savings shortfalls by 17% to 26%, depending on race.

According to the Society of Actuaries (SOA) Research Institute, the COVID-19 pandemic has had an uneven effect on participants preparing for retirement in different racial and ethnic groups. Previous research has found that Hispanic workers in particular have lagged other groups in retirement savings.

The EBRI report found that implementing the proposed measures to reduce retirement savings deficits would have impacts across demographics but would be particularly effective for certain cohorts. 

Families in the youngest cohort studied (ages 35 to 39) with white, non-Hispanic heads would require an average of an additional $31,084 in retirement savings at age 65 in order to avoid running short of money in retirement, whereas families with Black heads of household would require an average of $47,781 and families with Hispanic heads would require an average of $42,860, according to the new EBRI issue brief. Families with “other” heads would require an average of $42,704.

“The combination of ACPA provisions and an enhanced Saver’s Credit program have the greatest positive impact on the retirement savings shortfalls of families headed by white and Hispanic workers ages 35 to 39,” the report states.

The retirement savings surpluses of families headed by Black workers these ages are most positively impacted by the same modifications, EBRI research shows.

For families headed by Black workers, the retirement savings surplus increase is 57.9% under the two proposals; for Hispanic families, the surplus increase is 49.3%; for white families. the surplus increase is 43.9%; and the surplus increase for families headed by “other” households is 39.9%.

The EBRI study then examined impacts to retirement savings shortfalls if, in addition to benefitting from ACPA and the Saver’s Credit, all workers ages 35 to 39 eligible to participate in a 401(k) were to also receive an employer matching contribution to their plans in exchange for paying down a student loan.

The results for implementing a student loan match were that retirement savings shortfalls were projected to be reduced by 22% for families with Black heads ages 35 to 39, a 2.9% incremental improvement vs. the projection that considered just the ACPA and Saver’s Credit scenario. Savings shortfalls were reduced by 2.8% for families headed by White heads, and .7% for  families headed by Hispanic heads age 35–39 when student loan matching was added. The additional reduction for families with “other” heads falls in between, at 1.4%. 

The study repeated the analysis by considering the impacts from the remaining two provisions, “skinny” 401(k)s and auto-portability.

Retirement savings shortfalls with these proposals were projected to be reduced by 3.9% for families with Hispanic heads in the 35 to 39 age range; 3.8% for families with white heads; 3.1% for families with Black heads; and 2.6% for families with “other” heads.

Adding auto-portability results in a 14.3% reduction for families with white heads; for families with Hispanic heads this age, the further reduction would be 13.9%; families with Black heads would have a further 13.5% decrease; and families with “other” heads would have 10.8% further decrease.

EBRI previously estimated that auto-portability provisions would significantly boost retirement savings over time.

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal, D-Massachusetts, has proposed implementing a student loan debt match, a “skinny” 401(k) and full auto-portability. In September, the Ways and Means Committee approved similar ACPA changes. Meanwhile, the Saver’s Credit proposal was included in retirement provisions of early versions of the Build Back Better Act to help close the coverage gap and bolster the existing retirement savings system but was later dropped from the bill before reaching the full House of Representatives for consideration.

 

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