Wednesday, December 23, 2009

The 401(k) Solution – Part II

By Mark Folgmann

In order to create a solution we must first admit we have a problem. If you are a regular reader of my column you will already know that I believe we have a major disappointment coming when our current workforce gets ready to retire over the next 25 years. Most 401(k) plans we review are dramatically under funded and will not be large enough at retirement to assure a desired lifestyle. The average employee has less than one year of income accumulated within their plan. Unfortunately most fiduciaries entrusted with the oversight of these plans are not actively engaged and are somewhat in denial. Operating in this environment reminds me of the quote by the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Daniel Boortin when he said “The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.” Both employees and employers are way overconfident about their ability to deliver successful outcomes.

Albert Einstein said “You can’t fix the problems with the same minds that created them.” Therefore the solution to the 401(k) problem is for the employers and professional asset gathers (Financial Advisors) to get out of the retirement plan business. We must admit we have a problem and enlist the minds of people that truly understand the problems and know what they must do to solve them. Someone who can discharge their duties of loyalty to both the participants and their beneficiaries so they can increase retirement incomes. It’s my personal opinion that virtually all plans with less than 10 million of assets join a multiple employer plan. This is a plan that allows small business owners to ban together like the Governments Thrift Savings Plan to gain economies of scale and create successful outcomes for employees. In his August column this year Scott Simon from Morningstar Advisor calls the multiple employer plan the “Platinum Standard.”

In the marketplace there are very innovative solutions that allow the small business owner to get out of the retirement plan business while still providing a fantastic retirement plan for their employees. The business owner ends up making only one decision, to join the plan or not while everything else is automatic. Just imagine, no enrollment meetings, no boring employee education sessions eating away at company time but yet a plan structured for success while providing the company protection from liability. The best also utilize professional portfolio managers to create model portfolios to obtain market returns for their employees. Since the average employee is not trained or capable of managing their investment portfolio these professionally managed model portfolios will increase their account balances. A multiple employer plan can typically be joined for about half the cost of a typical 401(k) offered by the financial service industry. To learn more about multiple employer plans visit www.gfiduciary.com. With a combination of technology and innovation we are likely to see more and more solutions for the retirement dilemma but we must be willing to get outside the box and look for 21st century solutions.

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