Senators seek more retirement plan pop

Legislators looking for ways to boost Americans' savings for retirement and access to advice.
DEC 09, 2013
Two lawmakers who championed retirement plan reforms in 2001 are seeking more changes that would boost Americans' savings for retirement. "The top of my list is that we need to do something to encourage more lifetime income options. Too many individuals are outliving their retirement income," Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md., said at an Insured Retirement Institute panel discussion on retirement security challenges in Washington on Wednesday. "I'm also very concerned about investment advice." Americans "need investment advice" and he wants to make sure the fiduciary rules that the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Labor Department are working on don't prohibit advisers from offering reasonable counsel, Mr. Cardin said. "Advisers shouldn't be prevented from providing common-sense advice," he told reporters after his remarks. Sen. Cardin didn't offer specifics on his interest in new lifetime income options, other than saying his goal is to take the pressure off Social Security and allow people to live comfortably throughout their retirement. Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, said he also wants to find ways to encourage people to save more. "We have to make sure people have a backstop," he said. "Social Security was never meant to be the sole source of retirement income." Declaring that "the 401(k) model works," Mr. Portman said he doesn't want to see Americans rely only on individual retirement accounts, which don't offer matching contributions and don't come with investment advice or auto enrollment. "As people are living longer and as Social Security is under more and more pressure, we need to encourage people to save for their retirement," he said. In 2001, when they both were members of the House, the two senators sponsored retirement security legislation known as the Comprehensive Retirement Security and Pension Reform Act. The legislation boosted contribution limits for retirement plans, expanded small-business plan access and allowed for auto enrollment. Sen. Cardin said he'd also like to further strengthen auto-enrollment rules for retirement plans. "Americans are famous for making decisions by inaction," he said. Lisa Dolly, chief operating officer of Pershing, said at the same IRI event that studies show households that have advisers save twice as much as non-advised households — and they save more quickly. Specifically, one study showed that after working with an adviser for four to six years, households had 58% more in savings than those without an adviser, she said. After working with an adviser for seven to 14 years, households had 99% more than those who didn't have an adviser.

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