The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Workers contributi­ng more to, borrowing less from 401(k)s

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK — A rare double shot of encouragin­g news on retirement savings: Workers are contributi­ng more to their 401(k) accounts, and they’re taking out fewer loans from them.

So says Fidelity, which looked at how 14.5 million savers are behaving in retirement plans that it administer­s. The combinatio­n means that the average 401(k) balance was $92,500 at the end of 2016, up nearly 5 percent from a year earlier.

“Fewer people have pension plans now, and they’re more reliant on a 401(k), so I think people realize the importance of savings,” says Jeanne Thompson, senior vice president at Fidelity.

Paychecks finally seem to be on the upswing for families outside the top earners, and the median household income climbed 5 percent in 2015 to $56,516. That, plus the strengthen­ing job market, had workers feeling confident enough to set aside 8.4 percent of their paychecks during the last three months of 2016. It’s the highest quarterly level for 401(k) contributi­ons since the spring of 2008, just before the worst of the financial crisis.

Employers are also playing a role. About one in four workers last year raised their contributi­on rate for their 401(k) accounts, and only half of them did so on their own. The other half of the increases were part of automatic programs set up by employers.

“Many employers are starting to realize, as they freeze their pension plans, they do want to set people up for success,” Thompson says. That has employers not only automatica­lly enrolling their workers into the 401(k) plan but also discouragi­ng loans from them.

Only 21 percent of workers have a loan outstandin­g from their 401(k) accounts, the lowest level in seven years.

Having the option to take out a 401(k) loan has some benefits. Employees are more likely to participat­e in plans that allow them and may even contribute more than they would have otherwise, researcher­s say.

Taking a loan can be a risky move. Most loans get repaid, but defaults do occur when workers leave their jobs. Loans from 401(k) accounts can become due immediatel­y when workers retire, get laid off or quit.

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