Los Angeles Times

Employers’ 401(k) match rates lower at firms with auto-enroll

- By Walter Hamilton walter.hamilton@latimes.com

Is your company making a paltry contributi­on to your 401(k) retirement account? If so, this may be why.

Companies that automatica­lly place employees in 401(k) plans contribute less money to workers’ retirement accounts than firms without automatic enrollment. That’s the upshot of a study released Tuesday.

Seven years ago, Congress passed legislatio­n enabling companies to automatica­lly place workers in 401(k) plans.

The goal was to increase participat­ion among people who otherwise wouldn’t have joined 401(k)s. It’s part of an effort by the government and private companies to boost Americans’ dreary level of retirement saving.

On the surface, it appears to have worked. At companies with automatic enrollment, 77% of employees are in 401(k)s, according to the study. It’s 67% at companies without auto-enrollment.

But the analysis by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College suggests that, in effect, other employees may be paying for it.

Companies typically make matching contributi­ons to each employee’s 401(k) account. The match at companies without auto-enrollment is 3.5%, according to the study.

Companies with auto-enrollment pay only 3.2%. That might not sound like much of a difference, but it’s statistica­lly significan­t, according to the study.

Why the lower rate? Because companies are trying to hold down their overall 401(k) costs, the study suggests.

Companies with higher levels of 401(k) participat­ion have to shell out more in matching contributi­ons. So they might be responding by reducing matching contributi­ons.

“Firms with auto-enrollment may offset higher 401(k) participat­ion costs by trimming their per-participan­t contributi­ons,” the study said.

In other words, employees who normally contribute to their 401(k)s might be subsidizin­g the participat­ion of others.

“While auto-enrollment will increase saving for workers who would not have participat­ed without it, those who would have participat­ed on their own may end up saving less due to relatively low employer match rates,” the study concludes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States