AP Explains: How retirement legislation impacts you
Americans generally do not have enough saved for retirement and
There are a few retirement-related bills of note making their way through
WHAT IS IT?
The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement Act, known as Secure Act, is designed to help more people save more for retirement.
Its highlights include a provision to make it easier for small businesses to band together to offer retirement plans to employees. It also opens the door for long-term part-time employees to gain access to workplace retirement plans. It would raise the age that Americans must start drawing from retirement savings, known as the required minimum distribution age, from 70½ to 72, as people are living and working longer. It also provides more years for people to contribute to individual retirement accounts, for the same reason.
Additionally, it creates new rules that could expand lifetime-income options within workplace plans, such as annuities, to help people establish reliable stream of income in retirement. It would also make it easier for employees to transfer retirement plan assets when they change jobs.
There are other notable components, such as allowing employees to withdraw savings penalty free for the birth or adoption of a child. And it would fix a component of the 2017 tax overhaul that raised taxes on benefits received by family members of deceased military veterans, as well as taxes on some students and members of Native American tribes.
WHY DOES IT MATTER?
Americans are facing a major retirement savings crisis.
Almost half of
It's a complex problem, driven in part by a shift away from traditional pensions toward a do-it-yourself savings system.
Research has shown one of the most effective ways to get people to save is through access to a workplace retirement plan. But millions of Americans do not have access to such plans, particularly at small businesses where the cost and complexity hinders some companies from establishing one.
So this legislation is important because it removes some of those barriers, said
It's not a cure all but experts say it's a step in the right direction.
WHAT'S NEXT?
The bill was approved in the House with a 417-3 vote and now goes to the
There is a similar
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