Washington State OKs Retirement Marketplace
A new retirement plan marketplace is being set up in the state of Washington.
May 20, 2015 - Plansponsor.com
The Small Business Retirement Marketplace is being launched
under a bipartisan bill signed Monday by Washington Governor Jay Inslee. The
measure will give companies with fewer than 100 employees an easily accessible
option for employees to save in a tax-advantaged account.
The state estimates 1.5 million Washington workers lack
access to a workplace-based retirement savings account. Illinois recently passed a similar program to support workplace retirement savings e
that industry observers described as the first program of its kind to be implemented
in the states.
A new marketplace director will work with the private sector
to establish a program to connect eligible employers with qualifying plans.
Employers are free to choose from an array of voluntary private retirement plan
options, including life insurance plans designed for retirement purposes. The
program will offer at least two kinds of savings plan: a plan modeled on the
SIMPLE IRA that takes employer contributions, and a plan similar to an
individual retirement account funded through payroll deductions, which doesn’t
take employer contributions.
The bill’s sponsors, Sen. Mark Mullet (D-Washington) and
Rep. Larry Springer (D-Washington), are themselves small-business owners who
know firsthand about the retirement savings challenge. The two see the
marketplace as a much easier solution to what is now a complex effort.・/p>
The number of Washingtonians who lack adequate retirement
savings is unsustainable, said Rep. Springer, and is leading to an enormous
strain on the state’s resources if they wind up on public assistance. The
marketplace is a viable alternative, and one that’s easy for small-business
owners to use.
Starting Early
“Employers do not have to do anything but deduct and forward
the money, the same way they handle taxes,” Springer said. “We know people are
very unlikely to save for retirement if they are not offered a plan through
work. The Small Business Retirement Savings Marketplace will allow more workers
access to a safe, easy, and affordable way to retire in dignity.”
Sen. Mullet noted that it’s not just retirees in the near
term who must be prepared for retirement. “We also need to make sure 20- and
30-year-olds are saving,” he said. “We have to break a cycle of people reaching
retirement age who are not able to keep working but are too poor to retire.”
Small businesses often lack the information and resources
available to find the right retirement savings plan for their employees, said
Marin Gibson, managing director of the Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association (SIFMA). She lauded the program for its expected access to
low-cost, low-fee options that are fully portable and provide the same investor
protections available to private investors.
Washington’s legislation is part of an AARP national
initiative called Work and Save, supported by a number of organizations,
including AARP Washington, the Economic Opportunity Institute, Russell
Investments, Small Business Majority and SIFMA.
Additional Details
The Small Business Retirement Marketplace will be designed
and managed by the Department of Commerce, including developing criteria for
private-sector financial services firms to participate. The Department of
Commerce will identify and promote existing federal and state tax credits for
employers participating in this plan.
The state of Washington will carry out various supportive
measures, including:
- Identifying
financial services firms willing to offer specific retirement plans and
investments,
- Establishing
a marketplace website for employers to learn about the firms and their
products,
- Publishing
performance data on investments; and
- Enforcing
agreements of the marketplace.
The marketplace plans to offer features including:
- No
cost for a business to participate;
- Employees
pay fees no greater than 1% of their account balance;
- Employers
may contribute either a flat 2% of salary or match employee contributions
up to 3% of a worker’s salary;
- Employers
can choose a plan with employee contributions only;
- Employees
decide how much to contribute and choose their own investments; and
- Plans
on the marketplace will have very minimal paperwork for employers.
The text of the Small Business Retirement Marketplace (SB
5826) is here.
Jill Cornfield
editors@plansponsor.com