Nearly three-fourths of workers participating in a retirement savings poll said that employers' matching contributions of up to 5 percent of their salaries would greatly influence their decision to join a savings plan at work. In its 15th annual Retirement Confidence Survey, the Employee Benefit Research Institute found that, in addition to matching employer funds, 65 percent of workers were more likely to join a company-sponsored retirement plan if the plan offered an investment option that automatically provided workers with a more conservative allocation as their retirement date approached, while 56 percent said that they would join up if the plan contained a provision that raised employee contributions by a fixed percentage when they received a pay raise. The annual study measures attitudes of workers and retirees toward saving, retirement planning and financial security. A majority of those polled admitted to being behind in their retirement savings, yet confident that they'll reach their savings goal by retirement. Some 69 percent indicated that they or their spouse had accrued some savings for retirement -- the survey's highest level in more than 10 years.
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The Governmental Accounting Standards Board is looking for public comment on proposed guidance for reporting on infrastructure assets.
2h ago -
Exchange funds could help address some wealthy clients' concentration risks and tax quandaries at the same time.
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The Top 25 Firm will acquire KLG Business Valuators & Forensic Accountants in a deal expected to close this May.
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Leaders at Top 100 Firms have a host of new concerns about staffing, culture and succession.
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RIA Soltis acquired accounting, tax and advisory firm GDM Private Financial Solutions, the latest example of client demand for integrated wealth and tax planning solutions.
April 8 -
The Big Four Firm is globally embedding enterprise-scale agentic AI into its assurance engagements, meaning that audits will now use the technology in its firms worldwide.
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