基于就业的退休计划参与:地理差异和趋势,2010。

EBRI issue brief Pub Date : 2011-10-01
Craig Copeland
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引用次数: 0

摘要

最新数据:本问题简报根据美国人口普查局2011年3月的当期人口调查(CPS),即目前可获得的最新数据(2010年底),考察了工人参加公共和私营部门以就业为基础的养老金或退休计划的水平。赞助率:2010年,在所有工作年龄(21-64岁)的工资和薪金雇员中,54.2%的人在赞助退休计划的雇主或工会工作。在21-64岁(与劳动力联系最密切的人群)的全职、全年领工资的工人中,61.6%的人在赞助计划的雇主或工会工作。参与水平:在21-64岁的全职,全年工资和薪水工人中,54.5%的人参加了退休计划。趋势:这一比例与2009年的54.4%基本持平。参与趋势在1990年代后期显著上升,在2001年和2002年下降。在2003年和2004年,参与趋势趋于平缓。退休计划参与水平随后在2005年和2006年下降,然后在2007年显著上升。2008年和2009年出现了轻微的下降,随后在2010年趋于平缓。年龄:参与率随着年龄的增长而增加(55-64岁的工薪阶层为61.4%,而21-24岁的为29.2%)。性别:在21-64岁的领工资工人中,男性的参与率高于女性,但在全职、全年工人中,女性的参与率高于男性(女性为55.5%,男性为53.8%)。与男性相比,女性工人在工资和薪金工人中参与的可能性较低,这是因为她们的总体收入较低,全职工作的比例也较低。种族:西班牙裔工人参加退休计划的可能性明显低于白人和黑人工人。与不同收入水平的人相比,黑人和白人参加计划的比例差距总体上缩小了。地域差异:南部和西部的工资和薪金工人的参与率最低(佛罗里达州的比例最低,为43.7%),而中西部北部、大西洋中部和东北部的参与率最高(西弗吉尼亚州的参与率最高,为64.2%)。其他因素:白人、高学历、高收入和已婚员工比他们的同行更有可能参与。
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Employment-based retirement plan participation: geographic differences and trends, 2010.

LATEST DATA: This Issue Brief examines the level of participation by workers in public- and private-sector employment-based pension or retirement plans, based on the U.S. Census Bureau's March 2011 Current Population Survey (CPS), the most recent data currently available (for year-end 2010). SPONSORSHIP RATE: Among all working-age (21-64) wage and salary employees, 54.2 percent worked for an employer or union that sponsored a retirement plan in 2010. Among full-time, full-year wage and salary workers ages 21-64 (those with the strongest connection to the work force), 61.6 percent worked for an employer or union that sponsors a plan. PARTICIPATION LEVEL: Among full-time, full-year wage and salary workers ages 21-64, 54.5 percent participated in a retirement plan. TREND: This is virtually unchanged from 54.4 percent in 2009. Participation trends increased significantly in the late 1990s, and decreased in 2001 and 2002. In 2003 and 2004, the participation trend flattened out. The retirement plan participation level subsequently declined in 2005 and 2006, before a significant increase in 2007. Slight declines occurred in 2008 and 2009, followed by a flattening out of the trend in 2010. AGE: Participation increased with age (61.4 percent for wage and salary workers ages 55-64, compared with 29.2 percent for those ages 21-24). GENDER: Among wage and salary workers ages 21-64, men had a higher participation level than women, but among full-time, full-year workers, women had a higher percentage participating than men (55.5 percent for women, compared with 53.8 percent for men). Female workers' lower probability of participation among wage and salary workers results from their overall lower earnings and lower rates of full-time work in comparison with males. RACE: Hispanic wage and salary workers were significantly less likely than both white and black workers to participate in a retirement plan. The gap between the percentages of black and white plan participants that exists overall narrows when compared across earnings levels. GEOGRAPHIC DIFFERENCES: Wage and salary workers in the South and West had the lowest participation levels (Florida had the lowest percentage, at 43.7 percent) while the upper Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast had the highest levels (West Virginia had the highest participation level, at 64.2 percent).

Other factors: White, more highly educated, higher-income, and married workers are more likely to participate than their counterparts.

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