Get more! Sign up for PLANSPONSOR newsletters.
Simple Steps to Provide Successful Student Loan Repayment Benefits
Student debt management is a complex and delicate issue that has a significant impact on employees’ broad financial wellness—but providing support can be straightforward from the plan sponsor perspective.
Student loan education, repayment and refinancing specialist CommonBond recently hosted a panel discussion about the topic of “the missing benefit,” by which the firm means payroll integrated student loan repayment and refinancing support for employees.
Journalists and financial industry professionals were invited in by the firm to hear speakers, including Healther Coughlin, U.S. solutions leader for financial wellness at Mercer, along with Naz Vahid, managing director and law firm group head at Citi Private Bank, and Tara Malone, vice president of employee benefits for Young & Rubicam Group. The panel spoke broadly about the student loan debt challenges facing workers across the United States, and they all agreed that both employers and employees will benefit from greater uptake of student loan repayment benefits.
But what exactly does it take to roll out a student loan repayment benefit? The panel, which also included CommonBond VP of Partnerships Leigh Gross, walked the audience through some key steps for successfully crafting and implementing these benefits.
The first step is simply to conduct research and collect some preliminary data, with the goal of reaching a better understanding of the workforce’s student debt burden. Plan sponsors may be surprised to learn that student debt is not just effecting newly hired Millennials, the speakers noted, pointing to data showing U.S. student loan debt has topped $1.4 trillion, including nearly $75 billion in “parent PLUS loans” taken out by individuals on behalf of their college-age kids.
“Take a systematic approach to understanding your employees’ needs related to student debt,” Gross suggested. “This could involve conducting both formal and informal organization assessments to understand your employees’ student debt situation from the bottom up, and how the debt situation could change in the near- or mid-term future. While internal surveys are an option, they may not always accurately capture the extent of your team’s financial hardships, depending on how willing your workers are to open up about this highly sensitive subject.”
Using a third-party to compile qualitative and quantitative data may help provide a clearer and more accurate picture of the employees’ student debt and financial wellness, the experts agreed. Once this baseline is established and some basic benchmarks have been set, the experts suggested this is the time to bring the idea of student loan debt repayment to top company executives and HR leaders. The benefit should be framed in the context of promoting overall compensation and other benefits, such as the health care plan and the retirement program.
“The data, paired with specific recommendations to address your employees’ unique student debt situation, will be key to getting executive buy-in to launch an effective student loan benefit program,” Gross stressed. “Once you have a better understanding of your employees’ financial wellness, you will be in a much stronger position to evaluate whether all your benefits are being leveraged by as many employees as they should be.”
Gross noted that it is common to see employers think about adding student loan repayment benefits in the context of reallocating budget dollars spent on less-impactful benefits.
“Offering student loan benefits to your employees is also a powerful social statement, and this should be discussed up front as a great boost to the employer’s image, both internally and externally,” Gross added. “Relying on a provider that you trust and that has substantial subject matter expertise is key. Make sure the provider you’re working with reflects those same social values.”
Once an employer commits to delivering student loan repayment benefits, Gross said it will be helpful to assign a lead internal implementation specialist to oversee the launch process and the ongoing administration of the program. The broader benefits staff can support this person and help deliver a strong communications plan to best educate employees about the value of the benefit.
“The last suggestion is to make sure that you are consistently measuring the impact and iterating over time,” Gross concluded. “The evidence from plan sponsors who have introduced these benefits is already overwhelmingly positive from a worker attraction and retention perspective.”
Student debt impact by industry
According to survey data shared by CommonBond, the technology industry is the number one industry affected by student debt, with 53% of workers currently having student loans taken out to fund their own educations. In this industry, CommonBond reports, an outstanding 65% of employees carrying student debt took out $50,000 or more in student loans. As a result, more than 77% of employees believe that their employer should take an active role in helping them improve their financial well-being, irrespective of whether they currently have student debt or not (this statistic tied with retail and finance). Tech is actually one of the few industries staying ahead of the curve, CommonBond says, with 85% of human resources respondents planning to enhance their student loan benefit offering in the next three years.
Retail is the second-most affected industry by student debt, CommonBond says, with 49% of respondents currently having student loans. At the same time, retail “has one of the highest discrepancies in providing financial well-being programs.” The vast majority (95%) of human resources respondents believe they should take an active role in helping improve their employees’ financial well-being, but only 65% of employers in this industry actually do provide financial wellness benefits.
The healthcare and pharmaceuticals industry is the third-most affected sector by student debt, with 45% of employees revealing that they currently hold student loans taken out to fund their own educations. With 55% of those carrying student debt having taken out $50,000 or more, healthcare and pharmaceutical employees strongly believe their employers should take an active role in helping them improve their financial well-being.
According to CommonBond’s data, employees in the finance industry are not as affected by student debt as those in other industries, with 43% of respondents currently having student loans taken out to fund their own educations. Of those with student debt, 46% borrowed $50,000 or more in student loans for their educations. More notably, 5% of those with student debt took $150,000 or more to fund their educations. Finally, only about 35% of automotive/manufacturing employees surveyed currently have student debt from their own educations. This finding made the automotive and manufacturing industry the least impacted by student debt.
You Might Also Like:
Student Loan Debt Can Constrain Workers Even Into Retirement
Financial Finesse Announces Acquisition of OfColor
Walgreens Will Offer Student Loan 401(k) Match Program
« Hockey Players Have More Stable Pension Than Other Professional Athletes