With California move,
mandatory worker retirement plans gain momentum
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[October 07, 2016]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO
(Reuters) - The movement to require employers to offer retirement plans
to their workers just took a big leap forward.
California Governor Jerry Brown signed legislation last week launching
the state’s Secure Choice plan - a government-sponsored retirement
savings vehicle that would be offered to employees of most companies
that do not have their own workplace retirement plan.
California is the seventh state to enact a plan, and it will be the
largest by far in the nation. The green light marks a major expansion of
government-sponsored retirement plan coverage in the United States - the
plan is expected to cover 1.6 million workers in the first year alone;
ultimately, 6.8 million will be eligible.
The states taking action are alarmed at the prospect of large numbers of
their citizens headed toward retirement with little or no savings - in
part because roughly half have no access to a workplace retirement plan.
But California’s move also could also give a major boost to the Obama
administration’s efforts to expand coverage for workers at the national
level. Late last year, the administration launched the myRA platform as
a federally sponsored starter IRA for workers just beginning to develop
the retirement savings habit. In August, the California legislature
agreed to add language to the legislation that adds myRA as an option
for consideration by the Secure Choice board.
The idea would be to use myRA for up to three years while the state
tackles the myriad challenges of launching its own platform, said Dan
Reeves, chief of staff for Kevin de León, president pro tempore of the
California State Senate, who sponsored the California legislation.
A key task will be selection of a private sector financial services firm
to administer the accounts. A U.S. Treasury department representative
confirmed the department has been talking with California about its
possible use of myRA.
A partnership between California - the most populous state in the nation
- and the federal government would mark a huge expansion of myRA, which
currently has just 15,000 account holders, according to the Treasury
representative. California’s initial 1.6 million accounts are expected
to accumulate more than $3 billion in assets during the first year of
operation, expected to be 2018.
California Secure Choice will begin by enrolling workers at companies
with more than 100 employees, gradually phasing in workers at smaller
firms (those with more than five workers) over a three- or four-year
period. A total of 6.8 million workers will be eligible - 55 percent of
the state’s private-sector workforce.
The plan will be an IRA - most likely a Roth. Employers are not required
to contribute; employees would contribute through payroll deductions to
Secure Choice accounts. The plan's investments would be professionally
managed, and geared to produce conservative returns tied to Treasury
bond rates. The default contribution rate is expected to be 3 percent of
wages.
The myRA platform could be used while California shops for a private
sector vendor to administer the program. When that happens, myRA
accounts would be transferred to the new platform, which most likely
will consist of target date fund investments.
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California Governor Jerry Brown leaves the stage at the Democratic
National Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. July 27,
2016. REUTERS/Scott Audette
WATERSHED MOMENT
California was the first state to investigate starting its own mandatory
retirement plan, passing a law in 2012 authorizing study of the idea. It
now joins Illinois, Maryland, Connecticut and Oregon, which have already
enacted similar IRA programs; two other states (Washington state and New
Jersey) have created nonmandatory programs where workers can shop among
plans in a marketplace.
"California definitely marks a watershed moment, given its size,” said Sarah
Mysiewicz Gill, senior legislative representative for AARP, which has been a
strong supporter of state plans. The next big shoe to drop, she thinks, could be
New York state, where legislation is being considered both at the state level
and in New York City. A New York state plan would add 3.6 million workers.
If the
movement by states keeps gaining momentum, a tipping point could be reached
where opposition to a national mandatory plan fades. Two key opponents withdrew
their opposition to the California plan this year - the American Council of Life
Insurers and the California Chamber of Commerce.
A California partnership with Treasury also would signify growing federal-state
cooperation. The Obama administration, unable to get its own national auto-IRA
past Republican opponents in Congress, instead launched myRA as a workaround.
Essentially, it is a Roth IRA with payroll deduction features. There are no
fees, funds are invested conservatively in government securities and principal
is guaranteed by the Treasury. Balances cannot exceed $15,000 - at that point,
accounts must be transferred to a private provider.
The
administration also has embraced the state plans of late. Most notably, the
Department of Labor last year issued a rule guiding states on how to create
their plans without running afoul of requirements of the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act.
But momentum is building for a national solution. A recent report on retirement
system reform by the Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) called for a new mandatory
national Retirement Security Plan targeting employers with fewer than 500
workers (http://reut.rs/2dtBPaH). And some financial services leaders think that
if enough states pass their own plans, a critical mass will be attained and even
current opponents on Wall Street will support a national plan.
Action at the state level is good - but a national mandatory plan is what we
ultimately will need.
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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