An Inclusive Wealth Building Initiative study shows stark differences between employees with access to an employer-sponsored retirement plan and those who participate. Unsurprisingly, participation was largely driven by income levels. The Initiative, a project of The Economic Innovation Group, derived its data from various surveys, including the Census Bureau's Survey of Income and Program Participation and the Bureau of Labor Statistics National Compensation Survey. The study also used the 2019 Current Population Survey's Annual Social and Economic Supplement instead of the 2020 release, "because the 2020 survey was administered in March 2020 and likely suffered from lower response rates due to the COVID-19 pandemic," the authors wrote. The study found that 46% of workers nationwide have access to an employer-sponsored plan, with 15 states below that national average. Although many of those states are mainly located in the Southeast and the South, they also include California (43.7%) and New York (41.8%). New York and California are also among the 10 states with the lowest employer-sponsored retirement plan access for employees earning less than $50,000 a year. Florida and Texas, two more of the most populous states, top the list at number one and number two, respectively. The 10 states account for 43% of the country's low-wage workforce. On the other end of the spectrum, Maine and Iowa are the low-wage access leaders, at 51.7% and 49.7%, respectively. However, access doesn't necessarily equal participation. The study reveals that nationwide, 38% of respondents reported participating in their offered plans. Participation by low-wage workers was shown to be at least six percentage points lower than for overall workers and fully 25 percentage points lower on average than the higher-wage workforce. Iowa tops the list of low-wage participation at 39.7%, while Arizona comes in last with 19.8% of low-wage workers taking part in an employer-sponsored retirement plan. The Inclusive Wealth Building Initiative says the lack of well-designed retirement savings programs plays a significant role in contributing to the gap in participation. The slideshow above shows the top and bottom five states for employer-sponsored retirement plan access and also provides numbers for participation as well as access and participation among low-wage workers. Related: |

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Richard Binder

Richard Binder, based in New York, is part of the social media team at ALM. He is also a 2014 recipient of the ASPBE Award for Excellence in the Humorous/Fun Department.