Eight years have passed since the Pension Protection Act of 2006 virtually blessed automatic enrollment for defined contribution plans. Has automatic enrollment turned out to be the panacea intended?
In 2007, a financial services center whose plan participation languished below 50% began working with a retirement plan firm. Since the client had multiple branch offices of minimum wage-earning employees for whom English was a second language, it was difficult to meet effectively with everyone to encourage participation. As a result, the plan decided to add automatic enrollment with a default deferral at 1% into a target date fund. Participation, which started at 49% in 2007, ballooned to a whopping 84% just one year later. November 2014