Inflation concerns are forcing workers to reassess their retirement planning, new data show.
Many retirement savers also fear the financial repercussions of a recession, an Empower Retirement research brief, “Navigating change for a better tomorrow,” says.
“Although the United States was not in a recession when the study was conducted, 73% reported feeling anxious about how they would cope financially should one occur,” the brief, which draws on Empower’s Wealth and Wellness Index Mid-Year Survey, states. “Six in 10 (60%) said they would ride out a recessionary storm by delaying a major purchase [while] others said they would look for ways to make additional income. In addition, 58% said they would put more money into short-term savings and 56% would put more effort into paying down debt.”
Empower research shows that inflation and recession concerns are directly affecting employees, as 52% of survey respondents said they will put more money into retirement savings and 40% plan to save less for retirement.
Among the save-more cohort, 25% have initiated additional savings, 27% plan to do in the next six months and 48% have not done it and don’t plan to do so, the research shows. For the saving-less demographic, 21% have done so, 19% plan to in the next six months and 60% do not plan to make a change, according to Empower.
Among actions that individuals have taken to prepare for a potential recession, the most common was delaying a major purchase, at 38%. Seeking alternate income streams is second (32%), followed by paying off debt more aggressively (31%) and putting more money into short-term savings (31%).
“Our new research reveals sobering details about how inflation is impacting Americans’ financial attitudes and behaviors: 85% say they are worried about inflation, 69% say their income is not keeping pace and 56% believe their standard of living is declining,” the brief states.
Employers can help participants with inflation and recession concerns by ensuring that employees are aware of and taking advantage of the benefits for which they are eligible.
“Those benefits could include, among others, Employee Assistance Programs to help employees cope with stress and other emotional challenges or commuter program benefits to help offset the cost of returning to the office,” according to Empower. “Financial wellness programs and competitive retirement plans are also important differentiators for retaining or attracting talent. Staying attuned to what your employees are going through is what’s most important—and ultimately allows you to adapt to their changing needs.”
The survey was conducted by The Harris Poll on behalf of Empower and Personal Capital from April 19 to April 23 of this year. It queried 2,000 U.S. citizens age 18 and older.
Plan sponsors would be wise to annually pull back into their retirement plans employees who have opted out, according to a report from Capital Group.
Plan sponsors’ reluctance to use automatic features to bolster participant savings is a risk for plan sponsors because it will leave plan participants with insufficient savings when they reach retirement, says John Doyle, senior vice president and senior retirement strategist at Capital Group.
There may be no more optimal way for plan sponsors to help boost participants’ retirement savings and strengthen their retirement readiness than by using thoughtful auto-features, he says.
“If the objective is retirement readiness and getting participants ready for retirement, then automatic features seem to be the best way to do it, but it’s not black and white,” Doyle says. However, “if you do [auto-features] right, it is a really good start to getting people ready, saving for retirement and heading in the right direction.”
Employers should approach auto-features with great deliberation, Doyle wrote in an article for Capital Group titled, “Auto Features: Friend or Foe?”
A persistent mistake that plan sponsors make is in setting the auto-enrollment contribution floor, Doyle says.
“If you implement it wrong, meaning you offer too low a default rate, without a means to leverage inertia to get people to save more, they believe they’re saving the right amount and they’ll get to retirement with a very small percentage of what they really need to retire,” he says.
Auto-enrollment allows plan sponsors to automatically deduct elective deferrals from an employee’s wages unless the employee makes an election not to contribute or to contribute a different amount. For plan sponsors that are concerned about the retirement readiness of their employees, “getting them enrolled at the right amount is paramount to that success,” Doyle says.
“Sometimes the message we send with automatic enrollment is actually as much of a roadblock as not doing it at all, because if you do automatic enrollment at too low a rate then ultimately, you’re sending a message to participants that [they are saving] enough when the truth is it’s not,” he says.
Plan sponsors’ use of automatic enrollment has increased, according to the Plan Sponsor Council of America’s 64th Annual Survey of Profit Sharing and 401(k) Plans.
The survey found that auto-enrollment and auto-escalation “have made modest gains,” as 62% of plans in 2021 used an auto-enrollment feature. The survey also found that among plan sponsors, last year was the first year when the most common default deferral rate used by employees was 6%, for 32.9% of plans, while the second most common was 3%, for 29% of plans.
“My goal in writing the article was that there are certain myths out there that seem to perpetuate themselves,” Doyle says, such as “that 3% is a good default rate to get people started, [and] that auto escalation should be capped … those are two things that ultimately I think are holding back the success of auto features in retirement plans.”
Doyle highlights that savings amounts are stake when plan sponsors use a 3% deferral rate. As an example, he uses the median weekly earnings for full-time wage and salary workers in the U.S., $1,037 as of the first quarter of 2022. When extrapolated to an annual pay of $53,924—assuming certain market conditions and 4% average inflation—a 3% contribution rate would accumulate an estimated $1,618 of savings over one year.
In the example, setting the participant’s age at 40, the individual has at least 25 years to save.
“According to American Funds’ retirement planning calculator, someone looking for 80% of their final annual salary during a 20-year retirement, starting at $53,924, could need to save $1,074,032,” Doyle wrote. “With a 3% contribution rate, they’re projected to come out of 27 years’ worth of saving with $152,640.”
Auto-Escalation and Auto-Sweep
Doyle says plan sponsors should have a bit more courage when it comes to using auto-escalation, and that employers often overestimate the risks associated with doing so.
“Automatic escalation is not that controversial because it’s really easy for participants who [don’t] want to save more to opt out,” he says.
Auto-escalation is a feature that automatically increases participants’ contributions at regular intervals by a set amount until a preset threshold is met. At the outset of the use of auto-escalation there was a concern among plan sponsors that those participants who were auto-escalated to save more each year would feel that they were being forced to do so, Doyle says.
Doyle’s article suggests that plan sponsors should consider setting escalation caps at 15% of pay and let employees decide for themselves if they want to opt out. However, he says that in many cases, it’s unwise for plan sponsors to set a cap for escalations because “the cap is really an artificial barrier to participants being able to save enough for retirement, that’s part of the challenge.”
Automatic sweep is an emerging auto-feature that some plan sponsors use to, at certain intervals, re-enroll participants who have opted out of the plan.
Doyle suggests that plan sponsors use a yearly auto-sweep timeline, because it’s simpler and less confusing to participants and administrators.
“Do it along with open enrollment for the other benefits, because [workers are] already thinking about their benefits,” he says. “Automatically enroll them in the plan every year and if they want to opt out, they have that opportunity.”
With auto-sweep, plan sponsors have a weighty decision that can affect participants for many years into the future, Doyle concludes.
“One of the challenges is when somebody first joins a company, and [if] they opt out right off the bat because they’re starting a new job and then they never get re-enrolled again, they [may] never go back and look,” he says. “By bringing them back in every year, you’re giving [plan participants] the opportunity, and they can opt out—there’s nothing to stop them from opting out every year.”