The MyRA Is Being Eliminated. What Does This Mean For Retirement Savers?

In late July, the U.S. Department of the Treasury announced that it would be shutting down a program designed to help people who don't have access to workplace savings retirement plans.

The program was called myRA, and it allowed people to save as little as $2 a week (or more, like $200 a week), which would then be invested in retirement savings bonds backed by the U.S. Treasury. Once the consumer's account had $15,000, the money would be rolled into a Roth IRA.

[See: 10 Reasons to Save for Retirement in a Roth IRA.]

The program began during the Obama administration, opening in late 2015. Last month, the Trump administration announced it had decided the program was too expensive and is shutting it down.

In a press release, U.S. Treasurer Jovita Carranza said: "The myRA program was created to help low to middle income earners start saving for retirement. Unfortunately, there has been very little demand for the program, and the cost to taxpayers cannot be justified by the assets in the program. Fortunately, ample private sector solutions exist, which resulted in less appeal for myRA. We will be phasing out the myRA program over the coming months. We will be communicating frequently with participants to help facilitate a smooth transition to other investment opportunities."

The Treasury May Have a Point

Since 2015, only 30,000 people have signed up, and 10,000 of those accounts are empty. Still, as financial advisor Jamin Armstead says, perhaps the myRA needed a better public relations campaign.

"In a society where over one-third of the workforce does not have access to an employer sponsored retirement plan, where minorities and the poor are at a distinct employment, income and savings disadvantage, where advocating for retirement savings is a daily headline ... the myRA program could only generate accounts for 20,000 people? This isn't a failure of the program itself, but more so a tragic failure to market the program more effectively, or really, at all," says Armstead, owner of J. Dishon Financial LLC in Surprise, Arizona.

Adam Rust agrees that the marketing was lacking. Rust is director of WiseWage and Reinvestment Partners, a Durham, North Carolina-based nonprofit working to end predatory lending practices. "I never saw myRA appear in a sponsored search result on Google," Rust says.

In any case, Rust is disappointed that the Trump administration didn't give the program more of a chance.

"There is no reason why the Treasury should have canceled this program. It would have spurred more people to save. From a macro viewpoint, it also expanded the demand for Treasury bonds," he says.