More Americans have increased their retirement savings this year, but the percentage that didn't contribute at all was unchanged, according to a new Bankrate.com report.
The study, based on a telephone poll of 1,002 adults conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associational International, found that 23% of working American increased retirement saving contributions — the highest reading in six years — while 16% reduced them and 5% didn't contribute this year or last. Still, that 5% is half of what it was in 2015. About half of most respondents did not adjust contributions.
"Working Americans are increasing their retirement savings more and more as the economic recovery continues, whether by saving the same percentage of higher earnings or a higher percentage of the same earnings," said Bankrate.com's chief financial analyst, Greg McBride.
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Bankrate's Finacial Security Index also reflected more optimism about American's personal finances, rising to 105.8 in August, the third highest reading ever.
The firm's retirement report broke down contributions by age and by earnings.
Millennials led the way, with 27% increasing contributions over the past year followed by baby boomers (21% contributed more) and Gen Xers (20%). Even more members of the so-called silent generation, which the Pew Research Center defines as born between 1928 and 1945 (too young to fight in World War II) increased retirement savings (13%). But only millennials and baby boomers accelerated their increase in retirement contributions compared to their increases the previous year.
A stronger job market and auto-enrollment in many company retirement plans are helping millennials save more while a steady economy is supporting retirement savings of older workers, according to the Bankrate report.
"The higher propensity among millennials to save speaks to the efficacy of auto enrollment and auto-escalation in many 401(k) plans," says McBride. Such plan capabilities "not only increase the likelihood of people saving but the amount people are saving."