by Heineken » Fri 11 Apr 2008, 18:32:46
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'V')ision-master, what are you saying with your post?
That the people cashing our their retirement plans are making the smart decision?
I'd say they are making a stupid decision. If you don't believe that Social Security is going to be able to continue making full payments from now until forever, I'd say that you have a personal responsibility to provide for as much of your own retirement funding as possible.
That is, unless you want to work until you die which is what will happen if you don't save a dime...which is what happens when you sit around waiting for the world to collapse.
Look, I am an expert when it comes to retirement plans, that's how I make my nickel, and I can tell anyone who wants to listen that 401(k) plans are going to be a complete disaster when the Boomers start to retire.
The two largest problems are these:
1. amateur investors chase returns, ensuring sub-par returns at a given level of risk almost all of the time.
2. people don't view their 401(k) plans as "retirement" plans, they view them as "savings" plans, as in "I have the money there if I need it." Something ALWAYS seems to come up before retirement for which people NEED the money.
The tragedy of the slow extinction of the traditional defined benefit pension plan won't be fully felt until they are all gone.
Other 401(k) problems, in no particular order:
1. When the market tanks, 401(k) balances drop, but it is during these periods that people most need their money because what is hurting the overall market may also be hurting them individually (unemployment, etc.). By overloading on stocks, you are creating a situation that guarantees that if you ever REALLY need the money, you are likely to be locking in losses when you take a distribution, not to mention the penalties and taxes you may trigger with an early distribution.
2. 401(k) plan fund offerings are usually poor. Often no energy, precious metals, targeted foreign funds, long term bond funds (typically just intermediate term) or foreign currency funds (how great would it be to have, rather than a U.S. dollar money market, a currency basket money market type fund?).
3. If you read the history of 401(k) plan designs, it's clear it was never even intended to provide for a full retirement payment, it was just intended to supplement a traditional pension plan.
4. Lump sums are simply not safe in many peoples' hands. By making distributions in the form of a lump sum, you are placing a person in a position of greater risk than the benefits frequently justify. It would be better to pay all 401(k) accounts out at retirement over some period of time, not necessarily life, but no shorter than, say, five years.
5. 401(k) loans are convenient but stupid if that is your "retirement" money. Companies with pensions don't let you borrow from the present value of your pension benefit, why should it be different with a 401(k) plan? One more hole in the bottom of the bucket.
6. The biggest problem of all is the decision to provide 401(k) plans rather than traditional pension plans represents an enormous shifting of risk from the employer to the employee. Thus, I have to "worry" about my 401(k) investments, while under a pension plan, it is the employer who "worries" over whether the pension plan trust has an acceptable investment return, but your benefit is defined without regard to anything that happens in the market.
A lot of these issues are not on anyone's radar, but they will be as the flaws in the 401(k) plan design become clearer and clearer as wave after wave of Boomers find that they don't have enough money to retire.
Just don't put your 401k money in stocks or bonds, and the big risk goes away. I've always had mine in a major "guaranteed" (interest earning) account. The balance always goes in only one direction (up) and is always compounding. My employer matched 6% of my salary for the 15 years I worked for it, so with interest it was increasing by about 11% per annum without my having even to lift a finger. My contribution increased that to about 19%. On top of that you then have to add compounding, which is the real magic.