The Problem With President Obama’s ‘MyRA’ Savings Accounts

Piggy BankTime – by Dan Kadlec

To better enable Americans to save for retirement, President Obama said he would order a new “starter” savings plan called MyRA geared at low-income households. It’s a fine idea. But as with any personal savings account, you must be able to fund it for it to matter. That may be the biggest problem with the program.  

Little is known about these new accounts. They would function like a Roth IRA, allowing savers to put in after-tax money that would then grow tax-free. They’d be available through your employer to anyone who does not have an individual retirement account or work for a company that offers a traditional pension or 401(k) plan. That comes to about 39 million households.

The big advantage is that you could open a MyRA with as little as $25 and make contributions of as little as $5, creating a regular savings opportunity that most low-income households have never had. Typically, plan administrators require $1,000 or more to open an account. MyRAs would also benefit from a no-fee structure that does not eat away at savings.

Your MyRA would also enjoy a government guarantee against loss of principal. The downside is that your money would be funneled into low-yielding Treasury securities and have little potential to grow enough to make a big dent in your personal retirement savings crisis—or that of the nation as a whole—until you have accumulated enough to roll it into a regular IRA where you might benefit from investments with greater growth potential.

Offering low-income households a place to save doesn’t really fix the big problem: they still must have the money and the discipline to take advantage. More than half of workers have less than $25,000 in savings and 28% has less than $1,000 in savings, reports the Employee Benefits Research Institute. And with the MyRA, you could take money out anytime without penalty. That would be awfully tempting the first time money gets tight.

The retirement savings plan represents an important first step,” says Ai-Jen Poo, director of the National Domestic Worker’s Alliance. Still, she says, “Most Americans are not able to plan for their futures because they are trying to deal with their most immediate needs, like paying their rent and keeping their lights on.”

The new accounts call to mind the so-called “catch-up” provision enabling savers past age 50 to put away an extra $5,500 in their 401(k) each year. That’s a fine idea too, but since its adoption in 2001 only the relatively well to do have used it. Let’s face it: Not many folks have an extra $5,500 lying around.

Only 13% of those eligible have made the extra contributions, according to an analysis of data provided by Fidelity Investments. That’s largely because regardless of age almost no one even contributes the maximum $17,500—already a lot of money to take out of your budget each year. For the vast majority, the extra $5,500 has proven to be irrelevant, concludes the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

So let’s not pretend that MyRAs will save our collective retirement dreams. They give more people more opportunity to save, and you cannot argue with that. But for these accounts to make a real difference, the folks they are meant to help most will need extraordinary willpower.

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 @dankadlec

Dan Kadlec is a journalist who has written about personal finance for TIME and other outlets for 25 years. He is the author of three books, a leading voice in the global financial literacy movement, and strategic adviser to the National Financial Educators Council.

Read more: The Problem With President Obama’s ‘MyRA’ Savings Accounts | TIME.com http://business.time.com/2014/01/30/the-problem-with-president-obamas-myra-savings-accounts/#ixzz2rtFBIRGi

 

 

5 thoughts on “The Problem With President Obama’s ‘MyRA’ Savings Accounts

  1. Are you kidding me? This is just the latest scheme for stealing money from the working man, and if you believe ANYTHING Obama says you’re an idiot.

    Anyone putting money into this non-sense will have the magical experience of seeing it disappear.

    DON’T SAVE ANY MONEY. Spend every penny on things you’re going to need now, because it will only buy less of them next week.

    Your money only buys you a certain standard of living (depending on how much of the stuff you have), and if you want some semblance of that standard to survive a financial collapse (or currency collapse) you’ll need to secure as many of life’s necessities as you can right now, while the money still buys anything at all.

    If you already have all of life’s non-perishable necessities that you’re able to store, and you still have money left, store your extra wealth in silver. You should only buy gold if you have so much wealth that the quantity of silver is too bulky, and you’ll be traveling. Gold will be very difficult to trade, and if it’s all you have to trade, you’ll probably lose a lot of your stored wealth to you not being given it’s fair value in trade.

    “Gold is for kings. Silver is for people.” (I forget who said that, if it is in fact attributed to one author)

    1. Your good…. as I was reading I thought oh yeah save every dime so Obama can steal it and the interest too.

    2. Trying to educate people is a very time consuming job. I can not tell you how often someone has said to me I wont be getting much on my taxes this year. I want to scream. You dont want to get anything back if you are smart. You want every penny you can get in your paycheck.

      Then I try to explain. Do you know what inflation is? Yes, they usually say. Well then what do you think the buying power of your money when you get it a year later? You have lost as much as a third. That is more tax can you understand? If not I will go over it again. You are giving them your money to use all year and you get no interest. Do you understand that? I keep trying until they get it and then sometimes I wonder. I think they are creating a forced savings account where they get a withdrawal every year of hundreds some even thousands and consider it a windfall. That is the way the poor operate.

  2. Yeah, I’m all for the poor being able to save but I am one of the few workers paying to give welfare to them and I have to struggle to work on my 401K, I work pretty damn hard for what I have. It gains and loses money. To tell them the their principle will be guaranteed but with minimal gains is telling ME that your going to use my taxes to support their inability to live within their means…I have supported you in the past but this is BULL.

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