401k Auto Portability’s Significant Benefits to Pending Legislation

The sheer magnitude of incremental benefits delivered by the addition of auto portability was surprising
Auto-portability
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In a recent webinar from the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), Research Director Jack VanDerhei analyzed pending legislative changes, including automatic contribution plans and arrangements (ACPAs), paired with a refundable savers credit.

It was particularly timely and relevant since both ACPAs and a refundable saver’s credit are included in the retirement-related budget reconciliation proposal from the House Ways & Means Committee.

Unsurprisingly, EBRI projected that these two high-profile retirement savings policy initiatives would deliver significant benefits—which VanDerhei characterized as having a “huge impact on reducing retirement deficits”—particularly for younger age groups. 

However, the sheer magnitude of incremental benefits delivered by the addition of auto portability to those initiatives was surprising, which significantly pare retirement shortfalls for those aged 35 to 39, across all race and ethnicity categories.

About the analysis

In addition to modeling the impact of ACPAs and a modified savers credit, EBRI’s analysis also examined these initiatives in combination with other policies not presently on the legislative docket, including:

  • Employer student loan “offset” contributions.
  • A “skinny 401(k)”­­—a deferral-only 401k plan that allows annual contributions up to $6,000, with annual catch-up contributions of $1,000, after age 50.
  • Auto portability, a new plan feature that automatically moves participants’ retirement savings forward following a job change.

Interpreting the results

EBRI’s summary findings indicated that ACPAs, when paired with an enhanced savers credit or “match” would drive huge reductions in retirement shortfalls for 35–39-year-olds, ranging from 17 to 26 percent, depending on race. VanDerhei further noted that those policies would have an even broader impact when households who are not simulated to have a retirement deficit are considered.

Turning to the addition of other policies, VanDerhei remarked that either of the employer student loan contributions or the skinny 401(k) could add “another 4 percent reduction in retirement deficits.” 

Addressing auto portability, VanDerhei characterized it as “the real big kicker on top of the ACPA and saver’s credits. We find that if you add auto portability to that, you get another 11 to 14 percent reductions in retirement deficits, depending on race,” bringing the combined, total reductions for ACPAs, the saver’s credit and auto portability to a whopping 28 to 40 percent.  

These findings were illustrated later in the webinar by the EBRI diagram shown below.

Source: EBRI Webinar, 9/13/21 (The Impact of Proposed Legislative Changes on Retirement Income Adequacy)

Connecting the public policy dots

In a prior article, I wrote of the need to consider the unintended, or second-order consequences of retirement savings public policies. I expressed my belief that the dramatic expansion of workplace retirement savings plans while delivering significant benefits, could also result in increased cashout leakage as well as an increased incidence of missing participants and forgotten accounts.

In that piece, I also suggested that auto portability could serve as a complementary policy initiative that would mitigate those effects, and in so doing, deliver incremental benefits. 

EBRI’s analysis now seems to confirm that view. In fact, it seems that no other policy option even comes close.

Tom Hawkins is Senior Vice President, Marketing and Research with Retirement Clearinghouse, and oversees all key operational aspects of this area, including RCH’s web presence, digital marketing and plan sponsor proposals. In other roles for RCH, Hawkins has performed product development, helped lead the company’s re-branding, evaluated and organized industry data, and makes significant contributions to RCH thought leadership positions.

Thomas Hawkins, contributing author to 401(k) Specialist
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Tom Hawkins is Senior Vice President, Marketing and Research with Retirement Clearinghouse. He oversees all critical operational aspects of this area, including RCH’s web presence, digital marketing, and plan sponsor proposals. In other roles for RCH, Hawkins has performed product development, helped lead the company’s re-branding, evaluated and organized industry data, and makes significant contributions to RCH thought leadership positions.

1 comment
  1. It seems “Big Investment Firms” are probably pushing this ‘auto-portability’ to next employer. The small independent investment boutiques would lose out on 401k rollovers and other retirement plans if they auto-port to your new job and plan. Those that control the 401k or similar market would stand to benefit by retaining billions per year that would normally leave their plans via IRA rollovers. The unintended consequence would be fewer players offering fewer service and investment advise in an industry that already has shrinking advisers and less small businesses each year. This is a ‘Big Lose’ for competition and the common worker…have fun talking to a robo-advisor or an 800 number for investing advice if you don’t have $500,000 or more if this becomes a reality.

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