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Financial Planning Benefit Offerings Have Increased
Overall, DC retirement plans were the most common type of plan offered (93%), followed by Roth 401(k) savings plans (31%), traditional DB pension plans (22%) and cash balance pension plans (8%). In addition, 11% offered supplemental executive retirement plans (SERPs). The only retirement savings and planning benefit that was offered by fewer organizations in 2011 compared with 2007 was the DB pension plan (open to all employees). Twelve percent of all companies reported their DB plans were frozen, making them unavailable to newly hired employees.
Forty-one percent of organizations automatically enrolled employees into their DC plans unless employees actively opted out, 15% provided automatic escalation of salary deferral amounts for the plans, and 1% offered 401(k) debit cards. Organizations also offered financial planning benefits such as individual investment advice (42%) and retirement preparation planning advice (37%).
Five percent reported offering a phased retirement program (a reduced schedule and/or responsibilities prior to full retirement), which offers older workers a way to ease into retirement while passing along institutional knowledge to others.
Even though the percentage of companies that offered defined contribution plans continued to increase, there was a slight decline in the percentage of companies that offered employer-matching contributions, the report said. Seventy percent of organizations provided an employer match on some or all of the employee’s contributions. Sixty-nine percent of organizations offered DC plan loans.
Although the percentage of HR professionals that reported their companies have been negatively affected by the economic recession has slightly decreased over the last year, there has been a slight increase in the percentage of respondents reporting their benefits offerings have been negatively affected by the economy. In 2011, 77% reported their employee benefits offerings had been negatively affected (12% reported being affected to a large extent and 65% to some extent). This is a 5% increase over the last year.
Organizations spent on average 19% of an employee’s annual salary on mandatory benefits, 19% on voluntary benefits and 11% on pay for time not worked benefits. More than eight in ten (81%) organizations reviewed their benefits programs annually, and 7% reported reviewing them even more frequently. Only 2% of organizations never reviewed their benefits programs.
The report can be downloaded here.