If Auto-Enrollment Isn’t Quite Enough, Why Not Make it Better?
If you鈥檙e like me, you have no interest in foolishly looking at the dwindling numbers in your retirement plan. Luckily, I鈥檓 decades away from retirement and can afford occasional market volatility. My initial concern during this crunch, however, wasn’t the fluctuating values in our nest eggs. Instead, my worry was that employers might draw back from automatic enrollment programs, and that new employees might consider opting out of plans more frequently. Not so, according to people smarter than myself. , not only has the number of companies automatically enrolling employees in retirement plans , but there shouldn鈥檛 be much cause for concern that, despite what looks like prolonged doom and gloom for our economy, companies may find auto-enrollment less attractive.
For behavioral economists (and their many fans), this probably comes as no surprise鈥攄efault options work. What the article argues and suggests by its title, however, is that automatic enrollment (despite its increasing popularity) is insufficient in creating a robust nest egg at current match rates. Likely true, though the Tribune makes it seem as though auto-enrollment is a static business decision by saying that it 鈥渕ay create a false sense of security and discourage workers from putting more away.鈥
In 2007, according to the Profit Sharing/401k Council of America, 鈥攗p from 78.9% in 2006. Those 3% may not have sufficient funds for retirement, but it鈥檚 certainly better than not contributing. The alternative to automatic enrollment isn’t forcing employees to fend for themselves, it’s nudging them toward even more beneficial decisions.
The past few weeks and months have taught us the value of savings and responsibility on a personal, corporate, and federal level. Automatic enrollment, by any measure, has been beneficial to