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Speaker Johnson accuses demonstrating students of getting support from Hamas. TikTok says it'll challenge the ban. And the Supreme Court dives into the gray area between abortion and pregnancy healthcare, and into former President Trump's broad immunity claims.

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A "Less Risky" Approach to Retirement Savings?

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Monday, September 9, 2013   

SANTA FE, N.M. - Less than half of all workers have retirement plans on their jobs, making it harder to put money aside automatically for the future. A new report outlines a new way to save for retirement. The Center for American Progress says the "SAFE Plan" is less risky and less expensive than traditional 401(k) or IRA plans. The acronym "SAFE" stands for "Secure, Accessible, Flexible and Efficient." Comments from Gary Burris, senior policy associate, Economic Opportunity Institute. Image available: Photo of "nest egg" and cash.

Many people are not saving enough for retirement, and even those who are saw their savings take alarming dips during the recession. Now, a new report has called the traditional IRA and 401K plans inefficient and risky - and suggested a different kind of retirement account.

The Center for American Progress called it the "SAFE Plan." The plan is professionally managed but overseen by a board made up partly of plan members. Gary Burris, senior policy associate, Economic Opportunity Institute, said the SAFE Plan uses an investment strategy known as "smoothing," for less risk and more long-term stability.

"What smoothing means is that, in years when you have a high return rate, you don't put all of that money back into the pool - you save that, for the years when there's a low return rate. So those people who are in the retirement phase of the plan are not seeing big drops or gains in their retirement payouts."

The report also said there are too many hidden fees associated with the current crop of retirement accounts - fees that erode investors' nest eggs. The SAFE Plan would require approval by Congress.

The attraction for employers is that they would not have to guarantee specific returns for retirees. The report said a SAFE Plan would be run more efficiently than a traditional retirement account, so it has a better chance of achieving its growth targets. And Burris said businesses would be more likely to offer a retirement plan if it costs them less - which is key to getting more people to save.

"There are people who are already in plans, and there's definitely some need there to get more efficient and better returns and less cost. But the much bigger problems are those people that don't have anything right now - and that's mainly the small business workforce," Burris said.

He added that there is room for a state like New Mexico to come up with a workable plan more quickly than waiting for the federal government to do it.

The report on SAFE Retirement Plans is available at the Center for American Progress website, http://www.americanprogress.org.




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