Plan Sponsors Reaffirm Commitment to Workforce Retirement Benefits, According to New MetLife Study

In This Article:

NEW YORK, March 31, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Despite a constantly evolving macroeconomic landscape, plan sponsors remain firmly committed to providing workforce retirement benefits for the foreseeable future. MetLife’s 2025 Enduring Retirement Model Study, released today, found that eight in ten (82%) of plan sponsors cannot envision a time when their company would no longer offer any retirement benefits.

"In the fifty years since the passage of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, which was designed to safeguard the retirement, health and welfare benefits of American workers, the institutional retirement space has continued to evolve and mature to address larger macroeconomic trends and meet the changing needs of U.S. retirees," said Melissa Moore, senior vice president, Annuities, MetLife. "Our study has shown that despite massive shifts in this space, employers remain steadfast in their commitment to providing workplace retirement benefits, including defined contribution (DC) plans and other post-retirement offerings, that help retirees live comfortably after they leave the workforce."

Continued Commitment to Retirement Benefits
As they contemplate the future of the institutional retirement landscape, a majority of plan sponsors (58%) feel economic conditions like interest rate and market volatility, as well as demographic changes pointing toward an aging and multigenerational workforce (57%), are the market forces most likely to influence how this market will evolve.

When looking at their own plans, the top three reasons companies plan to continue to offer retirement benefits in the future are to serve as a competitive advantage in attracting and retaining talent (69%), to demonstrate their commitment to the long-term welfare of their employees (57%) and to enable their workers to financially be able to retire (52%).

Retirement Challenges
While they are focused on providing the resources to help their employees retire, employers also see a number of challenges facing older members of today’s workforce. In fact, 90% of plan sponsors report they have workers delaying retirement because they feel financially trapped.

Plan sponsors believe employees may be delaying retirement because they can’t afford to retire yet (64%), they need to maintain medical insurance coverage (62%), or they need to continue building their retirement savings (e.g., 401(k) plan) (49%).

The Roles of DC and DB Plans In Future Retirement Offerings
The most recent significant retirement shift facing employers has been the decline of DB pension plans, paid for by the employer, and the growing domination of the DC plan, the bulk of which workers are responsible for funding. Plan sponsors recognize this and its impact on retirement security—a vast majority, 93%, recognize that retirees need a source of guaranteed income they cannot outlive and 92% say the decline of traditional DB pension plans has resulted in greater reliance on DC plans to provide retirement income.