Benefits and Compensation

Small Business Worried about Retirement Readiness, Not Big on Plans

Most U.S. small business owners think the country’s lack of retirement readiness threatens business and the economy, yet that concern doesn’t necessarily translate to concrete action to address it, a new survey has found.

Only about one-third of small-business owners offer a retirement plan for their employees, according to “Poll Report: Small Business Owners’ Views on Retirement Security,” a study the American Sustainable Business Council and the Main Street Alliance conducted in March. The cost of maintaining a plan was the most prevalent reason respondents gave for not offering one.

Beyond the 33 percent that already have a retirement plan, a further 27 percent said they are interested in adding one.  Just 23 percent of the smallest businesses, those with two to four employees, provide a retirement plan option. Half of the companies with 50 or more workers had a plan.

“This polling shows that small business owners think that current options for offering a retirement plan are too costly,” Richard Eidlin, director for public policy for ASBC in Washington, D.C., said in a June 12 press release about the survey. “It follows that any proposed federal solutions must be low-cost and easy to administer if they are to be adopted broadly.”

To read the complete story on Thompson’s HR Compliance Expert, click here.

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