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During President Donald Trump’s February 24 State of the Union address, he lamented the gaps in the United States retirement system.
Specifically, he said there are approximately 56 million citizens who do not have an employer-sponsored savings plan (in which retirement savings are boosted by employer matching contributions).
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Describing the gap as “gross inequality”, Trump announced a government solution to the problem.
Trump’s 401(k) plan
Per CBS NewsTrump’s plan is basically based on savings savings Option available to federal employees, in which the federal government provides a matching contribution of up to $1,000 per year.
Trump’s initiative would expand on the SECURE Act 2.0 that was signed by President Joe Biden in 2022, in which the federal government will provide 50% matching contributions up to $1,000 for eligible low-income workers. It will also allow access to low-fee investment funds for stocks and bonds.
Who benefits?
“The biggest winners are gig workers and employees of small businesses who can’t afford to run a traditional 401(k),” according to Maitland Wealth Publisher Steve Maitland – whose research often focuses on the structural elements of the superannuation industry.
“The whole appeal of the Thrift Savings Plan model is its simplicity and great fees,” Maitland added. “If lawmakers could replicate that structure for the general public, it removes many of the cost barriers that typically keep middle-income workers out of the retirement market.”
Who will not benefit?
“Large-scale brokerages may suffer losses as the low-cost, government-backed public option cuts into their pipeline of entry-level investors,” said Yehuda Tropper, CEO of . Beka Life Settlementstold GOBankingRates. “If everyday workers are given a portable plan with extremely low fees and potential federal matches, they are much less likely to open or maintain a high-fee retail IRA. Volume-dependent brokerages will face pressure to squeeze their margins to remain competitive.”
Maitland said older workers are also less likely to receive benefits.
“Just handing someone an account doesn’t magically create retirement savings,” he said. “If you’re within five to 10 years of retirement, getting access to it now probably won’t move the needle much because you don’t have the time frame to compound growth.”
Editor’s note on political coverage: GOBankingRates is non-partisan and strives to objectively cover all aspects of the economy and offer balanced reporting on politically focused finance stories. You can find more coverage on this topic here GOBankingRates.com.
