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In theory, the government wants everyone to save up as much as possible for retirement so that citizens don't end up starving when they're no longer able to work. But in practice there is a limit of how much you can contribute to your pension fund (401k/Roth), which discourages people from saving up as much as possible.

What's the rationale behind this? Why not let people contribute more than $19k/year to their 401k?

Pete B.
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JonathanReez
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4 Answers4

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What's the rationale behind this? Why not let people contribute more than $19k/year to their 401k?

Retirement accounts are tax-advantaged, removing the caps would benefit the wealthier end of the spectrum and decreases tax revenue. The caps keep the retirement account benefits in line with other progressive tax policies.

Hart CO
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When the 401k was originally made in 1978, the tax-deferred route was the only one possible, so money would remain invested and untaxed until it is withdrawn. There was a concern that this would provide a misincentive for people to hide their high salary income from the progressive income tax regulation. At its core, this incentive delays the taxing and ongoing exchange of that money until it's removed from the market. While this provides economic investment to the economy, it does not provide economic growth or the taxable exchange of goods.

The government does not want its citizens to save as much as possible. It wants them to save just enough to not be displaced by economic hardship, and to spend everything else.

In theory, the government needs money to operate, and a portion of that money should come from the exchange of monetary goods/services (to maintain faith in the currency). While one concern of the government might be that citizens do not prepare their finances for an uncertain economic future, the government as a whole is likely more concerned with having too many economic misincentives that would hinder the funding and expansion of government services.

Shorlan
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In addition to the tax benefits that retirement accounts receive (favoring people with high incomes if there was no cap), what exists currently is dictated by current policy of policymakers. So your question about the "government wants" is determined by who is the current policymaker.

In theory, the government wants everyone to save up as much as possible for retirement so that citizens don't end up starving when they're no longer able to work.

For instance, if we had MMT policymakers, spending equals income (a government that prints its own currency can't run out of money), so savings wouldn't necessarily be favored over directly injecting money for people without money. And if people "ran out" of money, they could create more and give it to people since spending equals income and no money printed would be lost.

In fact, if MMT is passed, retirement accounts may be changed by future policymakers because are these necessary in this environment?

KriyanshAurik
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I'm not sure that this actually has much to do with progressivity, as the other answers imply. The fact that 401(k)s are tax-advantaged encourages savings (good) but also decreases tax revenue (bad, from the government's perspective). The latter effect would be bad (for the government's ability to spend) even if policymakers ignored both normative distributional goals and the factual progressivity of the existing tax code. The government probably just caps the contribution in order to balance these two effects and encourage savings while still maintaining sufficient revenue.

tparker
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