Blacks' Retirement Security at Risk
By Daniel Sorid, Associated Press
October 11, 2007
John Roper listens during a class at the Ariel Community Academy in Chicago
Employers
have begun to discover troubling racial differences within their 401(k)
retirement plans, a gap they say could leave today's black workers far
less financially prepared for retirement than whites.
Investor
surveys and research by two large employers strongly suggest that blacks
participate in retirement plans at far lower rates and are much less
likely than whites to invest in the stock market. An industrywide study of
401(k) plan activity by race has never been conducted.
Exelon
Corp., the country's largest
operator of nuclear power plants, discovered this year that about 15 out
of every 100 black employees did not participate in its 401(k) plan,
compared with around 10 of every 100 whites. It also found that one in
three black employees contributed less than 5 percent of their pay to the
plan, compared to just 14 percent of whites.
"We
have to start addressing that now," said Andrea Zopp, Exelon's senior
vice president of human resources. "If African Americans are not
investing at the same rate, they will be behind," she said.
McDonald's
Corp. discovered in 2004 that only
half of its black store managers contributed to the company's 401(k) plan,
a lower percentage than whites. The company plans to announce at an event
in New York that by auto-enrolling store
managers into the plan it has reversed the trend; today, 95 percent of
black restaurant managers are plan participants.
Few
employers today peer into their plans in search of racial or ethnic
differences, as they are required to do for discrepancies between high-
and low-income workers. Fidelity Investments and Vanguard Group, two of
the country's largest retirement plan operators, both publish encyclopedic
volumes on America's investing habits that lack any reference to race or
ethnicity.
Experts
attribute lower investment rates to poor instruction on financial topics
in public schools, and misconceptions about the risk of stocks within
parts of the black community. Employers have also been urged to tailor
their messages on retirement savings to account for what some black and
Latino executives say are important cultural differences. And the federal
government has been urged to strengthen its national strategy for
financial literacy, which has been criticized as ineffective.
A
survey by Charles Schwab Corp. and Ariel
Mutual Funds concludes that four in 10 African Americans with household
incomes of $50,000 or more have no money in stocks, compared to just one
quarter of whites.
Ariel's
survey also found blacks who enrolled in retirement plans save a median
$173 a month while whites save $252. The survey was administered in June
and July and has a margin of error of about 4.5 percent.
A
separate survey of retirees found whites are nearly twice as likely to
have $100,000 or more saved than blacks, even when education, peak income
level and other factors are held constant.
"There
are clear differences between blacks and whites: How we think about money,
where we save and invest our money, what we do with our money, and how
we're influenced as to what we do with our money," said Mellody
Hobson, president of Ariel Mutual Funds.
Since
the 1980's 401(k) plans have replaced traditional pensions as the
preferred retirement offering among employers. This shifted the
responsibility — and the investment risk — to the employees, who are
expected to contribute a portion of their paychecks before taxes. They can
choose from a menu of investment options offered by their plan
administrator, and some employers also match all or part of the employees'
contributions.
The
law allows plan providers to offer financial education to employees, but
limits the kind of advice they can give. As a result, workers are largely
expected to decide for themselves how much to save and which investments
to choose.
The
decline of pensions may disproportionately affect blacks. Two-thirds of
employed blacks surveyed by Ariel and Schwab in 2006 worked for employers
that offered pension plans, compared to half of employed whites. As
employers make the switch, blacks may be less experienced in handling
their own retirement investments.
Research
conducted by companies handling retirement plan record keeping found
striking differences.
Hewitt
Associates found race was a more powerful predictor of an employee's
retirement plan activity than age, gender, work experience or income, said
Hewitt's chief diversity officer Andres Tapia. As a result, Hewitt plans
to launch workshops for clients' black and Hispanic employees.
Great
West Retirement Services has concluded from researching the behaviors of
20,000 of its own and clients' employees that blacks are more likely than
whites to cash out of retirement plans when leaving a company, incurring
penalties and taxes, instead of rolling the money into a tax-deferred
individual retirement account. It also has found that its clients' black
employees allocate their retirement savings to far fewer investment types
than whites, Latinos and Asians, suggesting a lack of diversification.
McDonald's
is now considering allowing Ariel employees to give educational sessions
to its black employee network in the hopes they can better tailor the
message.
"We
found that people will listen more intently to people who are talking from
within their network," said Rich Floersch, McDonald's chief human
resources officer.
Ethnic
and racial groups approach saving and investing differently, said Hewitt's
Tapia, who was raised in Peru. For
instance, "long-term," suggests a shorter time horizon to
immigrant Latinos accustomed to political instability and high inflation
that made long-term planning seemingly impossible, he said.
There
are also lessons in the demographics of the black community, said Ariel's
Hobson. A larger percentage of African Americans raise children in
single-parent households, care for aging parents and have non-immediate
family members in their homes, she said.
"That
old saying, it takes a village, that's very, very clear in the black
community," she said.
Historical
factors may also play a role in blacks' preference of real estate over
stocks. Racial discrimination by mortgage lenders may have heightened
blacks' interest in owning a home, she said.
Blacks'
lack of participation in retirement plans can put employers and the
financial services industry on the defensive, said Lisa Toppin, Charles
Schwab's vice president for employee development.
"We
need to push past the discomfort," she said. "Everybody ought to
feel a certain level of anxiousness around America's preparedness for
retirement, because every chain is as strong as its weakest link."
Edward
Giltenan, a spokesman for the Investment Company Institute, declined to
commit the mutual fund industry's trade association to conduct research on
race. But he said the industry played an active role in pushing through
pension reform last year to encourage employers to automatically enroll
their workers in 401(k) plans, increasing participation. It has also
supported financial literacy programs for minorities. But more needs to be
done, he said.
Ariel's
Hobson hopes the company's survey, which has been conducted for a decade,
will finally prompt more research and discussions over the gaps.
"We
have 10 years of this data — year after year the same story," said
Hobson, who sits on the
ICI
's board. "It's not like this is some kind of fluke."
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