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The 401(k) scam: How American workers have been robbed of
their retirement benefits
By Elisa Brehm
15 August 2002
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A retirement crisis of staggering proportions faces millions
of American working people. The plunge in the stock market has
profound implications in a country where most pensions and savings
are not based on fixed benefits paid by employers, but instead
are dependent on voluntary contributions made by workers to be
invested on Wall Street.
The 401(k), as the plan is known, is literally a do-it-yourself
retirement plan completely dependent on the vagaries of the market.
With over $7.7 trillion wiped out in two-and-a-half years by the
44 percent fall of Standard & Poor 500, many face a shrinking
pension or none at all. Unlike a high-powered executive, the average
worker has no broker who is constantly following investments,
giving tips or advising him or her on the wisest allocations.
The 401(k) plan places the responsibility and burden entirely
on the worker.
Instead, the most common scenario involves ones employer
providing a packet of information with a number of funds from
which to choose. Oppenheimers Five Star Quest Balanced Value
Fund, for example, tells the 401(k) participant that this particular
portfolio has large, well established companies
that are undervalued by the market, and companies that fundamental
analysis identifies as well-managed, solid businesses
(emphasis in original).
The company at the top of this portfolios list is Worldcom,
Inc.!
Today 401(k) is a household word, but it was nearly unknown
20 years ago. During the stock market boom of the 1990s the 401(k)
was associated with the promise of easy wealth. With the rapid
rise of high-tech stocks, many workers saw their contributions
grow exponentially. William Wolman and Anne Colamosca, authors
of The Great 401(k) Hoax, write, it appeared as a
device that made it easy for the average worker to participate
in the biggest boom in history. It seemed the 401(k) would be
a perpetual wealth machine for each and every member of the great
American middle class.
A typical case is provided by Paul P.J. Palambo,
a long-distance truck driver who will be 62 next month. He started
contributing to a 401(k) plan in 1982. He told USA Today,
I got in when the getting was good, and it grew from zero
to almost $250,000. I said, thats great, I can retire when
Im 55. But with the two-and-a-half year fall in the
market and the growing economic slump, 401(k)s are causing increasing
concern, particularly for those in their 50s. Palambo lost close
to $50,000 this year alone, and his predicament is like that of
many others: Ive got thousands of shares of mutual
funds, and if I sell now, Ive lost it all.
Because they have seen their retirement savings wiped out,
many people are being forced to work longer years than they ever
expected. In the past year the number of people in the workforce
55 or olderthe only age group that is growingjumped
8 percent, to 20 million. These baby-boomers are facing a precarious
financial future.
Millions have been forced to abandon their plans to retire
in their 50s and early 60s to spend their remaining years enjoying
an active lifestyle. Now many of these workers will have to work
well into their 70s. Many in this age-bracket face the combined
strain of paying for college tuition for their children and at
the same time taking on the care of older parents.
A recent cover story in Time magazine, headlined Will
you ever be able to retire, noted that trends were leading
to a move backward to the historical normworking until
you dropand away from the experiment of the past few decades,
the only time in history when healthy people have stopped working
for the last 20 or 30 years of their lives.
The story of Robert and Kyuja Kafka, recounted in Time
magazine, is a common one. The family had saved diligently through
a tax-favored college fund, while at the same time saving for
their retirement. The Kafkas college and retirement savings
have declined in value more than 50 percent. Such college savings
plans, which came into wide use three years ago, are not providing
much sanctuary. They appeared attractive because the earnings
were exempt from federal and some state taxes; so long as the
market was rising, assets grew. The problem is that most of these
funds are in aggressive growth portfoliosthose that have
been hit the hardest, with losses of 30-60 percent. With a college
bill of $37,000 for tuition, room and board due this month, the
Kafka family is scrambling to find backup plansrefinancing
their house to secure a line of credit, applying for student loans,
and postponing a home-remodeling project.
While the fall in savings due to the stock market losses are
causing a huge financial strain, many workers have no savings
at all. According to a USA Today/Gallop Poll, more than
one-third of adults say they have no money saved in any kind of
retirement account and half of all households did not save a penny
last year. The average American household has virtually
no chance to reach an adequate retirement savings in the next
50 years, commented Christian Weller of the Economic Policy
Institute (EPI).
How retired people will livepay for food, housing, medical
care, not to mention expenditures other than the very basic requirements
of daily lifeis a very real question. According to an EPI
study, retirees need to have 75 to 80 percent of their pre-retirement
income available. Yet more than 40 percent of middle-aged households
will not be able to replace even half of what they made on the
job, and nearly 20 percent will have retirement incomes below
the poverty line. The EPI study was based on federal data between
1989 and 1998 does not take into account the implications of the
recent Wall Street plunge. Moreover, many workers have no access
to 401(k) plans or do not make enough money to contribute to one.
The US pension system is entirely inadequate or nonexistent.
Social Security, which came into effect in 1935, is to this day
a very limited benefit and was never conceived as being more than
a supplemental pension. Due to changes carried out by the US government,
the age at which workers can qualify for Social Security benefits
will soon rise to 67 from the current 65 years old. In addition,
the Bush administration has been campaigning to open up Social
Security to private investment, so that individuals can also put
a portion of their benefits into the stock market.
The grim reality is that only a very small percentage of American
workers have a fixed defined retirement pension plan sponsored
by their employers. In fact, today only 16 percent of the population
currently receives guaranteed-pension benefits that cover them
for life. Even at its height, fixed pensions covered only a fraction
of the workforce; mainly large manufacturing unionized industries
such as auto and steel.
The 401(k) became the new model for pensions during the 1970s
recession. Faced with the economic downturn, major corporations,
with the collaboration of the unions, began severing long-term
commitments to their employees. According to the authors of The
Great 401(k) Hoax, It wasnt the current cost of
pension plans that most frightened corporate America. The real
financial trauma was the implication of these obligations for
the future of corporate balance sheets. Long-term pension liabilities
were virtual black holes.
By 1980, less than half of the workforce was covered by traditional
defined benefit plans. By 1996, this number grew by only 3 million,
to a total of 41 million people. By contrast, the number of workers
participating in defined contribution plans, such as 401(k)s,
ballooned from 20 million in 1980 to over 50 million in 1996.
The long-term financial interests of workers became directly tied
to the fortunes of Wall Street.
Even when companies offered matching contributions to 401(k)
plans, on average they only contributed 2 percent of pay, compared
to the 6 to 7 percent of pay they typically contributed to traditional
pension funds. Enron, like many companies, strongly encouraged
employees to invest in the companys stock. Thousands of
Enrons current, laid-off and retired workers lost most of
their life savings when the company prevented workers from selling
its stock held in 401(k) accounts, just as the stock price was
plummeting.
Reports on account balances in 401(k) plans often give a more
optimistic picture of retirement savings, because the assets of
higher income workers skew the results. At the end of 2000, while
the average account balance was $49,024, 44 percent of participants
had balances of less than $10,000.
In contrast to the plight of working people, however, the top
executives of companies engulfed in financial scandals have no
retirement worries, even in those instances where their companies
have collapsed. In the case of Enron, Jeffrey Skilling made $78
million. Laid-off Enron workers received a mere $4,500 severance
payment, no matter how many years they had worked for the company.
See Also:
Pensions benefits slashed
for US workers
[13 May 2002]
Enron execs looted company
prior to bankruptcy
[22 June 2002]
Enron defrauded California
out of billions during energy crisis
[10 May 2002]
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