Your Work Retirement Plan

Are you really invested in your works retirement plan???

I know what you’re thinking, of course I am! If you have a 401K, hopefully you see a line item on your pay stub, with the amount or per cent you requested be taken out each paycheck.  These days some of us only have a paperless copy of our pay stub.  So here is why I asked. Last week I happened to be talking to two family members that both work in education. In the state we live in educators do NOT pay into social security, they pay into the state pension plan. Which is 11% of their pay right now. There are only 6 states that follow this plan. In the conversation I asked if they both also take advantage of the 403b retirement plan option? They both said yes. But as we got talking and they pulled up their online pay stubs, I said show me where the 403b is taken out? Well to both of their surprise it was not actually being taken out at all!

One of them had changed districts and filled in all the paperwork and asked everything get shifted over where the same company handled both school districts. Simple and easy right?

Here was the problem, the person on the other end never did anything, plus it is now a different HR/Payroll, because it’s a new school. It’s up to us to make sure the paperwork is in place and that the HR/payroll team is doing what you asked it to do!

One of the people only lost a little time, but the other lost 20 years! The other person also just never even thought of funding it monthly, and only relied on the pension, like the good old days.

Thirty years ago, there were more companies and jobs that offered a “Pension”. Here is the thing, people talk about social security and how there will never be anything left for most of us to collect. Who really knows???  Thirty years ago, if you had a job that offered a pension, people would say you were set for life! Well things started to change in 1978 when they passed the Revenue Act section 401K, which allowed employees to defer the taxes on the funds going into these accounts. Plus, these accounts can grow with compound interest. The law went into effect on January 1, 1980. That’s not that long ago.

Since the 1980’s, fewer private companies have offered a pension and for the people I know working in state jobs that do still offer a pension, they are always moving the mark! EX: The teachers I know were told years ago… Stay 30 years and you get your full pension! NICE, right? What if you started at 22 right out of school. Technically you are eligible for the full pension at 52!

 Not anymore, now they have moved the mark. You need 30 years PLUS you need to be 65 years old. WHAT?!  OK, maybe you just LOVE your job, and you think you will always LOVE your job… But what if after 25 years you’re burnt out and need a change? Now you’re in to deep… Or at least that’s what people say. But what if you let your “pension” money just sit there till your 65 and you do a different job, because you not only have the “pension” money, which is say 40% of your pay, vs 80%, you also have $500,000 in your 403b account still growing tax deferred! Might make it easier to make a change…. Plus your new job, probably has a 401K plan!

 Don’t get me wrong, I think it’s great if you have this benefit! I wish I did! BUT, if you’re young and starting out I think you really need to also put some money in your 403b or 457 retirement plans. It’s never going to hurt you! Even if it’s only $100.00 a month, it’s like $75.00 a month out of your check, because its tax deferred.

The lesson here is, FIRST LOOK AT YOUR PAYSTUBS, do not assume anything. You are responsible for making sure these things get done! There is NO Retirement babysitter checking on you. Once you know the account is being funded, make sure it’s not sitting there in CASH. Talk to the “advisor” of the plan, yes there will be one and have them help you allocate the funds. The term you hear is “asset allocation”. They can help you or if the plan has a ROBO advice, that works too. The online robo advisor will ask you some “risk” tolerance questions, and timelines. Then it will allocate the funds appropriately.  Nothing scarry here… Just taking charge of your stuff! You got this!