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Retirement Preparation
When Will the Secret of 401(k)s be Exposed? Most Employees Know Too Little to Succeed, BenefitsLink.com, 2002, Ackley
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Recent congressional hearings stemming
from the Enron fiasco put 401(k) plans
under scrutiny for the
first time. Although the
resulting legislation may not be
overly onerous, what about the
next time? There's bound to be
another negative 401(k)-related
issue lurking. There's just too
much - or too little - money at
stake for employees (voters).
Will Congress be as gentle the
next time? Will the 401(k)
benchmarks and success
measures - mostly antiques from
the days these plans were
'supplemental' to defined benefit pension plans -
meet the next challenge? Or could sponsors of
401(k) plans end up with a nightmare that goes
something like this ...
Ms Smith, we're delighted you're here. In
previous testimony, we've heard that in voluntary,
employee-directed retirement plans - like your
401(k) plan - employees must know how to use
them to be successful in achieving their
retirement dreams. We invited you here because
you're responsible for running a typical 401(k)
retirement plan.
Senator, it's a privilege to be here to tell you how
401(k) plans are helping employees retire.
Ms Smith, I see in your written summary that
nearly a third of all your employees - mostly
lower-paid - are missing
company-matching contributions
because they don't participate in
your plan. I'm equally concerned
that roughly half your eligible
employees under age 30 aren't
participating. So they're also
missing forever the opportunity
for what's been called the
'miracle' of long-term compound
earnings. Do all your nonparticipating
employees
understand what they are
missing?
I don't know for sure. I hope so.
In your report you point out proudly that your
plan's average account balance is around
$50,000. Yet when we dug into your numbers,
we found that half of your participants have less
than $14,000. And these amounts don't include
the zero balances of the third of eligible
employees who aren't participating. Is that right?
Well, yes, but Senator, I thought I was here to
focus on what we're doing well.
I'm sure that's what you thought. In fact, in your
report you point out that your employees at
retirement age - age 60 and older - have an
average of roughly $200,000.
When Will the Secret of 401(k)s be Exposed?
Yes. And I'm proud to say that some are much
larger.
I'm sure. I'll bet they belong to higher-paid
employees. What I'm seeing is that averages in
401(k) plans seem to hide more than they tell
Perhaps, but..
Pardon me. Isn't it true that half of your
employees who are close to retirement - those
over age 60 - have less than $50,000?
Well, that's probably right.
Ms Smith, you're a retirement expert. So I'm
sure you've seen various retirement payout
models. Those models usually show that to be
quite certain of having retirement income that
lasts as long as you live, you can take out only
about 4% or 5% of the initial account balance
each year. That means an employee who has
$50,000 in an account at retirement can count on
under $2,500 a year for life - that's around $200 a
month. Does that sound about right?
Yes.
Do your employees understand this?
That's not included in the education we provide.
Most employees would probably guess they could
take out over twice that much for as long as they
live.
Let's look at what else you don't teach your
employees. You say an attractive feature of your
plan is what's called portability. Employees can
take their vested account when they leave the
company. Yet most of your employees under age
35 take the cash, pay the taxes plus a 10%
penalty, and lose forever the opportunity to use
that money for retirement. Why is that a good
feature?
Well they should have known not to spend it.
There seems to be a lot your employees should
know but they don't. For example, surveys show
that roughly half the participants don't know
they're fully responsible for their retirement
investments. I'd say it's essential that all
employees in a voluntary retirement plan know
that. Do all your employees know that?
That's not something we measure.
I have a friend who's a pension actuary. She tells
me the first step in planning the funding for
pension plans is to have a clear retirement benefit
income target. Are you aware of that?
Yes, that's right.
So you and other experts say having a target is
step number one in retirement planning. Then
why do half the employees who are age 65 and
older - the 'graduates' of our retirement
education system - have absolutely no idea how
much money they'll need for retirement? They
can't even offer a guess . like, "Gee, if I spend
$20,000 a year for 20 years - say from age 65 to
85 - that's around $400,000." Would it be fair to
say that most of your employees have missed the
first step - they haven't set their personal
retirement benefit target?
That's probably true. But again, we don't
measure that.
I see you have a degree in finance. Me too. I
remember taking a couple semester-long classes
on investing. Is that what you did?
Yes.
In your report, you say that you provide
employees with one-hour meetings when they
sign up for the plan. And you send out a few
newsletters each year. I assume this is to help
your employees become proficient in using
investments for their retirement. So what took
you and me many months of study in college
courses that we wanted to pursue, you provide in a few minutes to people who probably don't share
the interest or background knowledge we had.
Isn't the employees' investment knowledge
critical in determining how successful they'll be
in accumulating their retirement income? Would
you agree with all that?
I guess I'd say so.
Wow, if our professors had used the sophisticated
and efficient teaching techniques you're providing
your employees, we would have gone through our
investment classes in a flash.
I'm not so sure the techniques we're using are .
well, never mind.
One of the things I remember from my college
courses is that retirement investments need long term
horizons. For example, a 30-year-old may
not be taking money out of a retirement account
for 30 or 40 years. But I see you offer both
Internet and phone access 24 hours a day, free of
charge, to let employees trade their mutual funds
every business day.
Yes. That's what most plans do.
That sends a mixed message doesn't it? By the
way, I don't know of any Wall Street investment
firm that does day trading in mutual funds. Yet
that's what your plan offers. Isn't that an odd
approach?
Employees always want more choices and
flexibility. That's what we gave them. It makes
them happy and it's easier than trying to teach
them what they need.
I'd hate to think that your role as a plan sponsor is
to keep employees dumb and happy. Anyway,
let's look at the account statements you send out
every three months. They focus on current
investment performance. Same with your plan's
website. Neither tells employees how they're
progressing toward their retirement goal. Aren't
the accounts supposed to be for retirement?
Well, yes.
Ms Smith, in surveys we've seen, plan
participants say they know more about investing
in their company's stock than any other
investment option. They also mistakenly say
company stock is less risky than a diversified
domestic equity portfolio. Is this what your
employees think?
Senator, again, we don't test our employees'
knowledge of how to use the retirement plan. We
keep track of how many creativity awards our
retirement education provider has won, how
many employees are participating compared with
other companies and things like that.
In your retirement plan booklet, you say the plan
is intended to help individuals achieve their
personal retirement dreams. Yet today you're
saying you don't measure how well individual
employees are doing in defining, pursuing, or
achieving their personal retirement dreams? So
how do you know if your plan is achieving its
strategy?
I didn't think I was going to be asked about
retirement adequacy for employees.
We've seen surveys showing that most 401(k)
plan sponsors don't believe that even half of their
plan participants will be able to afford an
adequate retirement. Given that acknowledged
50% failure rate, do you really think 401(k) plans
are working well as retirement plans?
You know, this hearing isn't at all what I thought
it was going to be.
Ms Smith, you've stated that employee education
is a critical element in helping employees be
successful in using 401(k) plans.
Yes, of course it is.
If it's that important, then I'm sure you have a
clearly written policy statement that guides your
When Will the Secret of 401(k)s be Exposed?
retirement education and communication
activities. Can you tell us about the specific goals
and measures you have for your retirement
education program? Are those measures based on
what successful participants know and do?
We probably should have that kind of policy
statement, but ..
Ms Smith, are all the education and
communication issues we've discussed today
things you've known about for several years?
Certainly, all plan sponsors know these things.
Wait, my attorney says I need to retract that
answer.
So you've had several years to fix your education
program and you've chosen not to.
My attorney says I don't have to answer that.
Would you say that all your actions in retirement
education - as well as actions you've chosen not
to take - were in the best interest of participants?
I can't answer that.
Ms Smith, I don't want anyone to think that what
you did or didn't do in retirement education was
illegal or that you intentionally did anything to
hurt your employees. But I do wonder if you
would agree that most 401(k) plan sponsors need
to completely reevaluate the goals, techniques,
and measures they have for retirement education?
Because without knowledgeable employees, how
can voluntary, employee-directed retirement plans
work well? Oh never mind . that's another
question your attorney won't let you answer.
Thank you for your testimony of how well run
defined contribution plans provide retirement and
investment education for employees.
Wake up. It's just a dream. Isn't it? Or maybe
the Enron mess was a wakeup call.
If employee-directed retirement plans are to
provide employees with adequate retirement
income, it's essential that the plans be
accompanied with an effective retirement
education. And the providers of retirement
education need to have specific measures to
ensure individual participants are acquiring the
knowledge they need to:
- price their personal retirement income target
- contribute and invest to attain that target
- receive their income so it lasts throughout
retirement
Without education outcome measures, how will
plan sponsors know if they are achieving the
plans' strategy - helping employees define and
achieve their personal retirement dreams?
Dennis Ackley
Dennis Ackley is a nationally recognized retirement
education and employee communication expert. He
spent over 20 years with major HR consulting firms
including Watson Wyatt and Towers Perrin where he
conducted hundreds of challenging communication
projects for many of the country's largest employers.
His award-winning programs have reached well over
a million employees to communicate retirement,
investing, health care and other HR-related issues. He
has published over two-dozen articles and is a
featured speaker at many conferences. In 1999, he
became Vice President, Participant Services at
JPMorgan/American Century Retirement Plan
Services. Recently, he established Ackley Associates
to help plan sponsors design and measure retirement
education programs. He can be contacted at dennisackley@hotmail.com
Not for publication or distribution without written
permission of the author. All rights reserved.
March
2002
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