Automatic IRAs becoming attractive as a savings option
Denise Geske panicked two years ago when her accountant told her about a new Illinois law that would require her to enroll her employees in a retirement savings program.
“As a small-business owner, I felt it was overwhelming,” she said. “I was terrified that I was going to be mandated to do one more thing.”
Geske, co-owner of Fox & Hounds Salon and Day Spa in Bloomington, Illinois, is close with her staff of 32. She wanted to give them health and retirement benefits, but since 2008, when she bought the business with her sister, Casey Pirtle, providing them with a savings plan had felt beyond her reach.
Her concerns were eliminated by Illinois Secure Choice, a state-administered automatic individual retirement account program begun in 2018.
The management and cost hurdles that Geske had assumed the state would make her take on never materialized; the Illinois program, she said, is not complicated or bureaucratic, and she bears none of the cost. Her employees, the savers themselves, pay the fees — but those are kept low by the large pool of participants.
Now every Fox & Hounds worker has access to health insurance and retirement savings.
“And I didn’t have to invest a lot of time figuring it out, and it’s free,” Geske said. Another benefit: She is under no pressure to match workers’ contributions. Federal guidelines prevent anyone other than the individual account owner from contributing to the accounts.
Business owners in other states can eventually expect to navigate some version of Geske’s involuntary education on auto IRAs. Programs
are running in California and Oregon.
Connecticut, Colorado and Maryland will start signing up employers in 2021. New Jersey has passed a law to build its own version. And at least 20 states and cities introduced legislation this year to establish programs or form study groups to explore their options, said Angela Antonelli, executive director of the Center for Retirement Initiatives at Georgetown University.
For all those states and cities, the goal is the same. The employers of half of private-sector workers in America — 55 million people — do not offer a retirement savings vehicle, Antonelli said. Anyone can open an IRA, but Antonelli said many workers were unwilling to navigate opening and funding an account on their own.
“State savings plans help address the access gap,” she said.
The programs share similar characteristics. In California, Illinois and Oregon, employers that do not offer a retirement savings program like a 401(k) but have more than a certain number of employees must enroll with
the state program by a deadline or face a fine (in California, $250 per employee). Once a business is enrolled, it uses its payroll system to register workers, who can opt out of the savings program at any time.
Paycheck deductions happen automatically and generally start at 5%, with some programs including an annual automatic uptick employees can adjust. Other common characteristics include portability, meaning workers can keep saving in the same plan if they change jobs, and easy access to funds. Auto IRAs are generally Roth IRAs, which are funded with after-tax dollars and typically allow for withdrawals of contributions without penalties.
But critics have surfaced. “It’s hard to say it’s a bad thing to make a savings opportunity available to people, but I would have preferred that there was more thought behind them,” said Andrew Biggs, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, and former principal deputy director of the Social Security Administration.