Financial advisers are making it crystal clear that they’re against the Obama
administration’s call to enroll individuals in retirement plans
automatically.
Roughly 84 percent of advisors recently polled by investment firm Brinker
Capital Inc. of Berwyn, Pennsylvania, said that the federal government should
not require participation in defined-contribution retirement plans such as
401(k)s, even though the same advisors also reported that their clients’ top
financial concern was their inability to retire on time.
Most advisors polled said their clients’ retirement savings are “off” because
of deteriorating market conditions. But at the same time, they cited “general
procrastination” and the fact that clients did not start saving early enough as
two of the main reasons clients are not prepared to retire.
Despite this, advisors still opposed the administration’s proposal to mandate
participation in defined-contribution retirement plans.
Separately, only about 9 percent of advisors said they believed that the
government had a responsibility to “make whole America’s defined-contribution
plans as part of the financial bailout.”
Filed by Mark Bruno of Investment News, a sister publication of Workforce
Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.
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