Government wants to “invest’ all your Money for little or no
return.
California Has an IRA for You, 8/23/16 WSJ Sacramento
creates a new public option for private workers that politicians control.
Liberals are demanding more
financial regulation, supposedly to protect consumers and taxpayers. So why are
they cheering a too-big-to-fail state retirement plan for workers in California
that would be largely unregulated?
In 2012 Democrats in Sacramento
authorized state-managed individual retirement accounts for some six million
employees working in the state without access to 401(k)s or pensions.
The legislation required employers
with five or more workers that don’t offer retirement plans to automatically
enroll employees in a new public option. Employees can opt out. A board
comprised of Democrats and their nominees—namely, union reps and attorneys—has
been charged with fleshing out the program’s details, which must be approved by
the legislature and Governor. The Senate green-lighted the plan in May, and the
Assembly intends to vote this week. The legislation gives the board carte
blanche to design and manage the state IRAs.
One of the few rules is that the
employee contribution must start between 2% and 5% of wages and can only
escalate by one percentage point annually up to 10%. Administrative costs after
six years are capped at 1% of program assets, which is greater than the
operating expenses charged by 90% of IRA equity mutual funds. The board could
invest workers’ money however it chooses, so politicians would be able to
direct billions toward their favorite causes. However, the board is supposed to
stick to U.S. Treasurys or “similar investments” during the first three years
to prevent the plans from going belly up if markets crash. So early investors
may get little return on their savings.
Taxpayers would have to cover the
program’s start-up costs (putatively in the form of a general fund loan), which
are pegged at $134 million. And while the legislation stipulates that the state
“shall not have any liability for the payment of the retirement savings
benefit,” nothing prohibits the legislature from bailing out the plans in the
future. Have you ever heard of a public fund that didn’t have an implicit
taxpayer guarantee? A legislative analysis notes that “the fiscal impact of
this bill is subject to considerable uncertainty.” No kidding. If more workers
opt out or contribute less than the board projects, administrative costs could
exceed the 1% limit. Taxpayers might have to pick up the difference. The
legislation also contemplates a “reserve fund” to smooth out market returns.
This would involve the board siphoning off investment returns when markets are
roaring to offset losses during other years. What could go wrong? A K&L
Gates legal analysis commissioned by the board warns that “early participants
and short term participants may not benefit from the reserve and could even
experience reduced returns in good market years.” On the other hand, “if the
reserve fund becomes sizable, the Board and the State Government may face
pressure to ‘break open’ the reserve for immediate allocation or, conceivably,
some State purpose.”
English translation: A retirement
program created by politicians will be subject to political interference.
Earlier this year the federal Labor Department proposed an Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (Erisa) “safe harbor” for state-sponsored IRAs that waives
fiduciary obligations for participating employers. This gives businesses an
incentive to drop workers onto the public option. But it also means that
workers might not receive typical IRA protections such as audited financial
statements and prospectuses. The legislation allows the board to determine its
investment disclosures while underscoring that “employees seeking financial
advice should contact financial advisors.” K&L Gates has recommended that
the board seek an exemption as a “state instrument” from federal securities
laws in order to skirt “significant reporting and disclosure obligations, which
could make the Program considerably more expensive to operate.”
Meantime, the board has implored the
Labor Department to allow state IRAs covered by the Erisa safe harbor to
“impose cost-saving administrative restrictions” on withdrawals. Thus, workers
might have to pay a penalty if they want to roll over their accounts into a
privately managed IRA or withdraw savings to pay for college.
Progressives are flogging
California’s plan as a prototype, and such paragons of fiscal rectitude as
Illinois, Oregon, Connecticut and Maryland are following its road to retirement
serfdom. Don’t
expect the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to guard taxpayers and workers
against this government-backed lemon.
Source:
Wall Street Journal
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