Estimating the effect of employer matching contributions offsetting student loan debt

Research Dialogue
Insights Report

The U.S. student loan market plays a crucial role in enabling individuals to pursue higher education, but for many borrowers it also leads to substantial debt.

Summary

Almost 50 million Americans owed $1.75 trillion in student loan debt in 2022, and most young workers are burdened by the need to repay these obligations. Yet if the young are to accumulate assets sufficient for retirement, they also must start saving in their employer-provided pension accounts. This paper investigates how such workers can manage both debt repayment and saving in tax-qualified retirement accounts to maximize their lifetime well-being. The authors also show how workers’ choices will be shaped by employer-sponsored matching retirement contributions when workers make qualifying student loan payments, as intended by the SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022.

Key Insights

  • The SECURE 2.0 provision concerning student debt could enhance pre-retirement consumption by up to 3%.
  • This paper estimates the new policy will induce workers to reduce their own retirement savings by almost 50%, yet this reduction is offset by the higher employer-matching contributions in recognition of the loan repayments.
  • The reform will not produce earlier estimated loan discharge dates, and it will only slightly reduce estimated non-retirement asset balances.

SECURE 2.0 lets workers repay outstanding student loans and receive matching employer contributions in a tax-qualified retirement plan.

Methodology

To estimate how employer-matching contributions might offset student loan debt, the authors created a life cycle model embodying key aspects of U.S. tax and benefit regulation.

Student loan debt outstanding
Authors
Vanya Horneff

Goethe University Frankfurt

Raimond Maurer

Goethe University Frankfurt

Olivia S. Mitchell

University of Pennsylvania

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