States' rights? Not so
much, when it comes to retirement savings
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[February 16, 2017]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO
(Reuters) - So much for states’ rights.
The Republican-controlled Congress took aim this week at states that are
creating retirement saving programs for workers who do not already have
401(k)s through their jobs. Seven states - including populous
California, Illinois and Maryland - are implementing
government-sponsored auto-IRA plans, and another 30 are considering
their own, according to AARP, which has been supporting and tracking the
initiatives.
Saving for retirement should not be all that controversial, but state
plan opponents in the business community object to an expansive
government role and the mandatory features of some of the state plans.
The House of Representatives approved a resolution on Wednesday that
would invalidate an important rule handed down last year by the U.S.
Department of Labor (DoL) in support of the state plans. The measure now
goes to the Senate. The rule exempts state plans from the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) if they meet certain
conditions. That provides important reassurance to employers
participating in the plan, who worry about compliance cost and legal
liability under ERISA.
The House resolution is an especially aggressive reach into the business
of states - and one rich in irony, considering Republicans' frequent
worship at the altar of states’ rights. But the auto-IRA programs have
powerful opponents in the financial services industry who do not want to
see a lower-cost government-sponsored “public option” to the retirement
products they sell.
“This is a payoff to the financial services industry,” said Joshua
Gotbaum, a guest scholar at the Brookings Institution who is serving as
chairman of the Maryland auto-IRA program.
“They are afraid of competition that would come from a huge program like
this that forces them to cut their own fees,” said Gotbaum, who is a
former director of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, the
federally sponsored agency that insures private sector pensions.
The resolution adds the auto-IRA to an anti-consumer hit list that
already includes the DoL fiduciary rule governing advice to retirement
savers. (http://reut.rs/2lP6l1v).
Repeal would not stop the states that have already enacted programs,
Gotbaum said. But it will create uncertainty. “It might mean that states
will need to get opinions from lawyers or the courts on whether the
plans are subject to ERISA or not.” And repeal could well slow down the
momentum among states still considering the idea.
The state initiatives started after the Obama administration’s proposal
for a national auto-IRA program was shot down by the Republican
Congress.
And support for the idea across the country has been strong. Just last
week, a telephone poll of 800 Americans by the National Institute on
Retirement Security found a 75 percent public approval rating for state
plans.
LESS GOVERNMENT?
Opponents’ objections - summarized in a letter to lawmakers this week
from a business coalition led by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce - include
opposition to the mandatory participation feature of some state plans,
although the mandate is to simply require employers to enable payroll
deductions (but not contributions) for uncovered workers. They also
worry about the administrative burden of managing plans with differing
standards in multiple states.
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A pair of elderly couples view the ocean and waves along the beach
in La Jolla, California March 8, 2012. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The
Chamber letter also argues that states cannot be trusted to run these programs
in light of underfunding of public-worker pension funds in some states. That
argument does not hold water, since pooled pension plans funded by taxes and
worker contributions bear no resemblance whatever to the auto-IRA plans, which
envision individual accounts held by a third party custodian.
So
this really is an ideological attack on the idea that government should take
steps to help people save more money. “Our nation faces difficult retirement
challenges, but more government isn’t the solution,” said U.S. Representative
Tim Walberg, a Michigan Republican who co-sponsored the House resolution.
Never mind that the private sector has failed to deliver on coverage: 401(k)s
have existed since the 1980s, yet only half of U.S. private-sector workers
participate in a retirement plan at any given time, according to the Center for
Retirement Research at Boston College.
Republicans are coalescing around a different approach to expanded retirement
plan coverage. The Retirement Enhancement and Savings Act (RESA), approved by
the Senate Finance Committee last year, aims to expand saving through enhanced
tax credits for small employers who start workplace plans. The bill also would
make it easier for businesses to create shared retirement plans - sometimes
called Multiple-Employer Plans (MEPs) - as a way to cut costs and administrative
burden.
MEPs
have enjoyed bipartisan support, but they would be voluntary. Few experts think
they would have as much impact on coverage levels as the mandatory state IRA
plans. “There is a lot of skepticism that if these plans don’t have a required
participation feature of some sort, it won’t be enough to shift the tide,” said
Shai Akabas, director of fiscal policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center. “There
needs to be more of a gentle nudge in that direction.”
AARP, which has been a major lobbying force in favor of state plans, agrees that
these plans may not be the perfect solution - and it does not object to the
Republican MEP initiative. But it holds that some action is better than none.
“We do have a preference for things like auto-enrollment and payroll deduction,
because behavioral economics tell us that these things work,” said Cristina
Martin Firvida, AARP’s director of financial security. “But letting the perfect
be the enemy of the good doesn’t expand coverage for anyone. We don’t want to
keep waiting for the perfect solution to come along.”
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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