EBRI 2010 Retirement Confidence Survey: Gender Comparisons Among Workers
EBRI Fast Facts April 9, 2010 1 pages
EBRI Fast Facts April 9, 2010 1 pages
New research from the nonpartisan Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) finds that auto-enrollment of participants in 401(k) plans is likely to be most beneficial to young and low-income workers, although high-income workers are likely to benefit from it as well. It also confirms earlier results that large employers adopting auto-enrollment have significantly increased the employer “match” to their workers’ own 401(k) contributions. EBRI Issue Brief Apr 1, 2010 24 pages
Health savings accounts (HSAs) are likely to play a minor part in savings for health care costs in retirement, according to a report issued by EBRI. That’s because both statutory contribution limits and currently low interest rates constrain the amount HSAs are able to generate, compared with the large amount needed to pay for retiree health expenses. Press release EBRI Notes Apr 1, 2010 12 pages
EBRI Fast Facts March 24, 2010 1 pages
Reflecting the changing economic landscape, more older workers are staying in the work force, but increasingly in part-time rather than full-time jobs, according to new research released by EBRI. Press release. EBRI Notes Mar 16, 2010 16 pages
EBRI Blog March 13, 2010
Americans’ confidence in their ability to retire appears to be stabilizing, now that the economic volatility of the recession has abated, but their self-described preparations for retirement continue to erode, according to the 2010 Retirement Confidence Survey (RCS) released by EBRI and Mathew Greenwald and Associates. However, the RCS also finds that a growing number of American workers are also planning to delay retirement—which has negative implications for the U.S. job market, where unemployment is high and layoffs continue to grow. As older workers stay at their jobs longer, the RCS results suggest that fewer existing jobs are likely to open up. EBRI Issue Brief Mar 9, 2010 44 pages
EBRI Fast Facts Feb 24, 2010 1 pages
The labor-force participation rate is increasing for older Americans (those age 55 and older) as older workers are faced with higher health costs and economic losses, according to a new study published by EBRI. Press release EBRI Notes Feb 18, 2010 20 pages
EBRI Fast Facts Feb 17, 2010 1 pages
Since the vast majority of Americans who have health coverage get it through their jobs, one obvious question raised by the health reform legislation pending in Congress is: How might it affect the U.S. employment-based health benefits system? At a recent day-long conference sponsored by EBRI, more than a dozen experts from a wide range of specialties found consensus on one point: Imposing a tax on health benefits (such as the proposed tax on so-called “Cadillac” health plans) is likely to cause major cuts in health benefits and might result in structural changes in the employment-based benefits system. EBRI Issue Brief Feb 16, 2010 24 pages
EBRI Fast Facts Feb 10, 2010 1 pages
EBRI Fast Facts Feb 4, 2010 1 pages
EBRI Testimony Jan 21, 2010 10 pages
EBRI Fast Facts Jan 20, 2010 1 pages
EBRI Fast Facts Jan 13, 2010 1 pages
The romantic Ozzie and Harriet-era notion of a worker spending a lifetime with a single employer and then retiring with the proverbial gold watch is just that—a romantic notion. Career jobs never existed for most workers, and still do not, according to a study released today by EBRI. Press release EBRI Notes Jan 7, 2010 20 pages