According to AARP, Americans are 15 times more likely to save for retirement when they can do so by payroll deduction through a 401(k) or other employer-sponsored retirement plan. However, while most large businesses – companies with more than 100 employees – sponsor a retirement plan, 51 to 71 percent of small businesses don’t. Because workplace retirement plans make savings – and in turn, a comfortable retirement – dramatically more likely for workers, increasing this percentage is essential.
So why don’t more small businesses sponsor a retirement plan for their employees? Recently, the Pew Charitable Trusts tried to find out. They surveyed 1,600 small and midsize businesses—those with five to 250 employees—to understand why some employers offer a retirement plan while others do not. The group found employers did not sponsor a retirement plan for the following reasons:
The Pew findings are hardly surprising when you consider most small business 401(k) plans are overpriced and subject to numerous annual tasks that can easily seem overwhelming to business owners with a lot on their mind. The good news? These barriers are not unsurmountable. In fact, I believe the opposite to be true. Expanding small business retirement plan sponsorship would just take some simple 401(k) reforms by Washington.
My top 3 reasons for why employers don’t sponsor a 401(k) plan differ a bit from what Pew found. My top reasons include cost, cumbersome administration rules, and fear of fiduciary liability. I think these problems could be mitigated with the following 401(k) reforms:
Studies show American workers save more for retirement when they can do so by payroll deduction, but a high percentage of small businesses – unlike their larger counterparts – fail to sponsor a workplace retirement plan. The key to closing this coverage gap is lawmakers in Washington making 401(k) plan sponsorship cheaper, easier and lower-risk for small businesses. I think this can be done with some simple 401(k) reforms.