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						Column: New U.S. state retirement plans are welcome, but 
						why so expensive?
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		 [December 14, 2017] 
 By Mark Miller
 
 CHICAGO (Reuters) - Next month, Oregon will 
		become the first U.S. state to start automatically signing up workers to 
		save for retirement if they do not already have a workplace 401(k).
 
 Eight other states are getting ready to launch state-sponsored auto-IRA 
		programs, and it is an idea whose time has come. Fewer employees have 
		access to workplace retirement plans and 47 percent of U.S. households 
		say their total household savings and investments are less than $25,000, 
		according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute. (http://reut.rs/2z3Sr45).
 
 States started taking up the cause five years ago when it became clear 
		that a Republican Congress would not approve the Obama administration’s 
		proposal to set up a national auto-IRA program to address the coverage 
		shortfall.
 
 But now that the first state plans are under construction, an 
		unfortunate reality is coming into view: These retirement accounts are 
		not going to be cheap for account holders, at least not in the early 
		going.
 
 In Oregon, savers initially will pay a fee equivalent to 1 percent of 
		the total amount invested in their accounts, or 100 basis points. That 
		is much lower than the fees charged by many small-business 401(k) plans, 
		which often exceed 200 basis points. But it is much higher than what a 
		saver would pay in a large plan - which is exactly what the state 
		auto-IRA plans aim to become.
 
 But like other states, Oregon is launching its auto-IRA program without 
		the support of taxpayer dollars. In most cases, employers above a 
		certain size will be required to set up automatic payroll deduction for 
		workers, who will be enrolled by default unless they opt out. Initial 
		contribution levels range from 3 to 5 percent, with contributions 
		invested in low-cost target date funds.
 
		
		 
		The largest expense is creating the network for automatic payroll 
		deductions by employers. In Oregon, for example, 85 basis points of the 
		fee will go to the third-party administrator selected to build and 
		operate the plan, Ascensus. Just 5 basis points will go to the state to 
		cover its overhead; the mutual funds will cost from 6 to 13 basis 
		points, according to a representative of Oregon State Treasury.
 Other states hope to launch with somewhat lower costs as learning 
		advances on what goes into creating a new structure like this. “If a few 
		of the early ones get a good start, there will be even more competitive 
		interest from vendors, and others will come in with lower expenses,” 
		said John Scott, director of the retirement savings project at the Pew 
		Charitable Trusts.
 
 California and Illinois will launch pilot programs next year. Illinois 
		will charge 75 basis points; California has not yet determined its 
		initial fees. Other states with plans in the pipeline include 
		Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey, Vermont and Washington 
		state.
 
		
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		CALIFORNIA AIMS LOWER
 The track record of 529 college savings plans points toward a drop in 
		fees over time. Ascensus administers 529 plans in 18 states; many 
		launched 15 years ago charging account holders 150 basis points, with 
		additional fees for enrollment and disbursement transactions, said Scott 
		Morrison, chief product officer at Ascensus. Those fees have plunged as 
		the market expanded and reached scale; many now charge less than 30 
		basis points, he said.
 
		“We think the same thing will happen in the auto-IRA market,” he added. 
		“But everyone needs to realize that early on, expenses have to be around 
		100 basis points.” 
		
		 
		Meanwhile, California hopes to launch with low costs due to the sheer 
		size and scale of its planned program. Roughly 6.8 million workers are 
		potentially eligible to participate in the California Secure Choice 
		program, according to a market analysis prepared for the program’s board 
		last year. After the pilot phase next year, employers with 100 or more 
		workers who lack their own retirement plans will be brought online in 
		2019.
 California’s enabling statute caps total expenses at 100 basis points - 
		but that limit does not take effect until after the program’s sixth 
		year. California also has the option of providing a loan to offset 
		startup costs, but so far has used loan funding only for limited staff 
		and consultant support costs.
 
		"Our size and scale here makes it a different situation," said Katie 
		Selenski, executive director of the California Secure Choice Retirement 
		Savings Investment Board. “That will make it interesting to watch what 
		happens here, especially as the program comes to substantial scale in 
		the first few years.”
 Illinois expects that its initial expense ratio will drop 
		“precipitously,” according to a representative for Illinois state 
		Treasurer Michael Frerichs. Maryland’s enabling legislation caps 
		administrative costs at 50 basis points; all-in costs will be “less than 
		50 basis points, but we will need to charge more initially to pay back 
		startup loans from the state,” said Joshua Gotbaum, chair of the 
		Maryland Small Business Retirement Security Board.
 
		The decision by states to force savers to bear all the startup costs 
		reflects difficult political realities. Many states are facing major 
		budget pressures and are under fire for problems with the funding status 
		of their defined benefit pension programs for public workers. Using 
		state funds to launch auto-IRA programs would have been a non-starter.
 But placing the startup costs entirely on savers is an unfortunate 
		political outcome - and it raises a fairness question, since early 
		savers will effectively be subsidizing those who join the program later 
		with lower costs.
 
 "That’s a real issue," said Selenski. “We’re going to do everything we 
		can to get fees as low as possible.”
 
		
		 
		(Editing by Matthew Lewis) 
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