The last decade has been a tumultuous one for employers. Against a backdrop of market bubbles and crashes, two recessions and rising health care expenses, companies have made changes to their retirement programs to mitigate risk and manage costs. Some have shifted risk to their workers by transitioning from defined benefit (DB) to defined contribution (DC) plans. Many have reduced the retirement benefits they provide.
With fewer employers offering DB plans, more employees are relying on DC plans as their primary source of retirement income. Although employers have made enhancements to their DC plans in recent years, companies that offer only a DC plan provide a lower level of retirement benefits, as measured by percentage of pay, than those that sponsor a DB plan. And even those companies that have maintained their DB plans have reduced the value of their retirement benefits, albeit from higher levels. If corporate America’s commitment to workers’ retirement plans continues to decline at the pace it has over the past decade, we could see retirement straits in the future that negatively affect employers and employees alike.
Key Findings