NYC Mayor Proposes Retirement Plans for Private Sector Employees

401k, retirement, income, security

More municipal-sponsored plans.

Fresh off a failed campaign for the Democrat nomination for president, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced plans for a city-sponsored “universal retirement savings program” for Big Apple private-sector employees.

Currently, about one and a half million private-sector employees in New York City have no access to a retirement saving program through their employer, Hizzoner claimed.

“Over a million New Yorkers work their whole lives and have nothing to show for it,” de Blasio said at a retirement security rally on Monday. “Rather than work until the day they die, Universal Retirement Security will allow more New Yorkers to breathe a sigh of relief later in life and truly enjoy the years they’ve earned.”

Contributions would come from employees exclusively (rather than from employers or the City) and made through payroll.

Plan specifics

The City’s proposal “would enable New Yorkers in the private sector to automatically enroll in an employee-funded retirement plan.”

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