‘Make saving very easy’: Retirement planning tips for the Biden era

President Biden took office at a time when millions of workers have had to readjust their vision of their retirement years due to pandemic-induced job losses and rising health care costs.

To compensate for these financial shortfalls in golden years, Matthew Rutledge, a research fellow at the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, recommended that the new administration set up automatic individual retirement account (IRA) plans for all Americans, particularly because not everyone is offered a 401(k) through their employer.

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“Those plans are very similar to the 401(k), where you have the tax advantages of saving,” he said on Yahoo Finance Live (video above). “And you reduce your taxable income in that year. But really, I think the main thing that it does is just make saving very easy by automatically withdrawing from your paycheck and allowing you to save in a kind of an automatic way, so that people don’t have to actually have to think about it.”

Mark Findlay and his wife Delores Findlay, of Erie, Pennsylvania, read the morning newspaper inside their home at Limetree Park where they spend the winter months in Bonita Springs, Florida, March 23, 2012. Medicare and Social Security, the massive programs that pay benefits to tens of millions of older Americans, are contentious issues in the 2012 presidential campaign. Seniors want the nation?s sputtering economy to be fixed, but not at their expense.   REUTERS/Steve Nesius  (UNITED STATES - Tags: ELECTIONS POLITICS SOCIETY)
Mark Findlay and his wife Delores Findlay, of Erie, Pa., read the morning newspaper inside their home at Limetree Park where they spend the winter months in Bonita Springs, Fla. REUTERS/Steve Nesius

‘You would want to make sure you have auto escalation’

At a time when one in three Americans have decreased or stopped their retirement savings altogether, according to a survey by FinanceBuzz, a fintech company, Rutledge proposed that the ideal government-sponsored IRA would help Americans feel prepared for their later chapters.

“As a result of the greater use of auto enrollment, where you don’t have to make it so that the employee actually has to do anything, they don’t have to even sign a paper,” he said. “In fact, the way auto enrollment works is, you have to sign a paper not to participate. You take advantage of people’s laziness that way, that choice architecture as a way to really get people saving more.”

An elderly woman on an electric scooter walks her dog in the garden of John Knox Village, a retirement community in Pompano Beach some 40 miles north of Miami, Florida on August 7, 2020. - About 900 retirees live in the John Knox Village senior community in Pompano Beach, South Florida. Of these, about 400 have learned to use technology to order food to their apartments, communicate with each other or participate in online social activities. Thirty of them participate in a book club over Zoom since the pandemic began. Florida, a coronavirus hotspot with nearly 8,000 deaths, is the US state with the highest proportion of elderly people, which is also the population most vulnerable to the disease. 20% of its 21 million inhabitants are over 65, according to a 2019 Population Reference Bureau study. (Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA / AFP) (Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)
An elderly woman on an electric scooter walks her dog in the garden of John Knox Village, a retirement community in Pompano Beach, Fla., on August 7, 2020. (Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)

Unlike any other IRA plan, Rutledge suggested one that auto escalates or deposits larger amounts over time. A 4% savings rate, he said, isn’t nearly enough to retire on by the time a person hits 65 years of age.

“What you would want to make sure is something like auto escalation, where gradually over time, they would be saving more,” Rutledge said. “Or try to make it so that people actually do make that active decision to try to save something more like 15% or 10% once you include an employer match.”

Additionally, he added, an automated IRA provides an ease in which anyone can save regardless of their financial literacy level.

‘We want to make sure Social Security remains there’

Though an automated IRA can provide an easy experience for retirement planners, it shouldn't divert focus away from the other pillars of retirement.