The Small Business Administration office of the US Government has just published “Saving for Retirement: A Look at Small Business Owners”, by SBA economist Jules Lichtenstein. Surprisingly, even owners of medium and larger sized businesses scored poorly in retirement account ownership, contribution, and participation rates. You can download the paper here:
http://www.sba.gov/advo/research/rs362tot.pdf
Four questions we ought to ask ourselves as business owners:
1) How dependent is my retirement on selling this business?
2) How certain am I that a buyer will give me the price I want for this business?
3) What have I done in the last 12 months to co-ordinate my personal and business savings objectives?
4) If I don’t make a change now, what do I expect to accumulate by the time I stop (or am forced to stop) working?
Quoted from the SBA Study’s Executive Summary:
“Conventional wisdom holds that owners of larger businesses are more successful and more likely to have and contribute to retirement saving accounts than micro-business owners.” However,
“The key results of this study suggest some cause for concern about the retirement savings plan behavior of business owners. Retirement account ownership, contribution, and participation rates for all business owners are low. Individual-based (outside work) retirement account ownership, contribution activity and employment-based participation (at work) among business owners are low.”
“Policy implications of the study’s findings include developing ways that help the owners of the smallest businesses, especially home-based businesses and sole proprietorships, increase their retirement savings. Developing ways to help minority, especially Hispanic, business owners increase their retirement savings is also a policy goal suggested by this study’s results. In addition, there is a need to better coordinate employer-based retirement accounts with individual-based accounts like IRAs and make plans less complex and burdensome, especially for owners of micro-businesses. Future research could include analyzing the effect of default provisions on behaviour in both individual- and employment-based retirement account plan options.”