U.S. Census Wrong on 401(k) Coverage

401k, retirement, Census, ICI

They're off on their count.

Most American workers participate in employer-sponsored retirement plans, but you wouldn’t know it from recent Census numbers.

A new Investment Company Institute study, “Who Participates in Retirement Plans, 2014,” shows that 63 percent of workers aged 26 to 64 in 2014 participated in an employer plan or had a spouse who participated.

The study also confirmed that the underreporting of retirement plan participation in the U.S. Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey (CPS) increased substantially following a recent revision to the household survey’s questionnaire.

The CPS participation rate dropped sharply beginning in 2014, the first data collected using the new questionnaire.

In contrast, the tax data show that the retirement plan participation rate has held steady since 2008.

In addition, the study looked beyond the overall participation rate to show that participation increases with both age and income.

In 2014, 56 percent of workers aged 26 to 64 participated in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, and another 7 percent did not participate but had a spouse who did.

For workers aged 45 to 64 with income of $30,000 or more, however, 77 percent participated or had a spouse who participated.

“More American workers are benefiting from employer plans than the conventional wisdom would suggest,” says ICI Senior Economist Peter J. Brady, who co-authored the paper with ICI Associate Economist Steven Bass. “This is for two reasons. First, the most widely cited statistics undercount retirement plan participation. Second, many only look at the headline statistic, which provides a snapshot of participation at a single point in time.”

But preparing for retirement is “more like a movie than a snapshot, and what matters are the resources that accumulate throughout a career,” he adds.

Many of the younger and lower-income workers who are not participating today will do so later in their careers, and as a result, will reach retirement having accumulated employer plan resources.

Key Findings:

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