A Savings Account

My decision as to whether or not to save in my workplace savings plan wasn’t long or complicated. 

Yes, I had to actually fill out a form, and yes, I actually had to figure out how to invest those savings (though in fairness, there were only four funds from which to choose, one of which was company stock). Yes, there was also a generous match, but when you’re young there are more enticing ways to spend your income than—well, not spending it. That said—and at age 22 I’d not always fully embraced my parents’ counsel—my mother didn’t hesitate to insist that I did so.  

My mother, now a retired school teacher, then (and still) reminds me with some regularity (and deserved pride) that she began having $50 taken out of her paycheck at work—though my father protested at the time they couldn’t afford to do so. Or at least he did until he saw that first quarterly statement—at which point he began looking into how he could start saving in his workplace savings plan. They started relatively late in their working lives—and yet she continues to draw from that 403(b) account (and my dad’s, which has outlived him) to this day.

Those memories have a special resonance for me this week—which happens to be America Saves Week—and while if you’re reading this, you likely save every day, many Americans don’t. While the overall theme/focus this year (it’s been a “thing” since 2007) is on “building financial resilience,” each day of this special week has a different focus: yesterday (Monday) was Save Automatically, today is Save for the Unexpected (and boy, hasn’t COVID reminded us anew and afresh of that need?), Wednesday—a particular favorite of mine—Save to Retire, while Save by Reducing Debt is on tap for Thursday and the week wraps up with a focus on Save as a Family.


Now, arguably every week could (or at least should) be America Saves Week—but this week’s special focus provides us all with an opportunity to share not only success stories, but practical insights on how to do what we’re told (often by ourselves) what can’t be done. 

You don’t have to have a workplace retirement savings plan in order to save, of course—but it helps. We regularly cite data that proves that even modest income workers—those earning between $30,000 and $50,000/year—are 12-15 times more likely to save via their workplace savings plan than left to do it on their own. It’s a combination of making it not only automatic, but easy! Particularly these days with automatic enrollment, diverse default investments like target-date funds and managed accounts, and the option of automatically increasing that rate of savings on a regular basis—easy, automatic and efficient. 

I’ve never been very comfortable lecturing others on the importance of saving—we all have unique circumstances and challenges to overcome, after all—and saving is, ultimately, a matter of personal responsibility and choice. But I need look no further than the example of my parents to see the impact that a savings discipline and, let’s face it, sacrifice, can make.

See, my dad thought they couldn’t afford to save, but the reality is—they couldn’t afford not to. 

- Nevin E. Adams, JD

 

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