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Can your employer take away your 401 (k) match? Sherwin-Williams did it.

    When a company suspends its 401 (K) match, this amounts to a wage reduction, some employees say.
    When a company suspends its 401 (K) match, this amounts to a wage reduction, some employees say. – Marketwatch Photo -Irustration/Istockphoto

    For countless American employees, the 401 (K) Business match is simply a fact of life: they regularly contribute to their pension plan and in turn sponsored by the employer, the employer kicks a matching amount. According to Vanguard, the average operating contribution corresponds to 4.6% of an employee's wage.

    But what if that match just disappears?

    That is a reality that some employees are confronted nowadays. Recently, Sherwin -Williams SHW, the prominent Ohio -based paint manufacturer, announced that it suspended his 401 (K) match, which, according to a report from Cleveland.com, was a company contribution of 6%.

    According to the report, the company, which did not respond to MarketWatch's request, blamed the switch from various economic factors. Among them: weak requirement of homes and the inflationary environment of recent years, to say nothing about President Donald Trump's rate policy.

    Sherwin-Williams is not alone in this respect. Other companies have made similar phone calls to suspend their 401 (K) match, especially during turbulent financial times, such as the pandemic or financial crisis of 2008-'09.

    Earlier this year, Werner Enterprises Wern, a truck company, also announced that it suspended his 401 (K) competition as part of an initiative of $ 40 million cost savings.

    “Werner takes deliberate steps to streamline the activities and position the company for long -term growth. This includes difficult but necessary organizational changes,” the company said in a statement.

    None of this can be reassuring for employees who are overwhelmed by such suspensions of the competition. “Many people just expect that that will continue,” says Karen Friedman, executive director of the Pension Rights Center, a non-profit organization that promotes pension security for American employees.

    Those business competitions can go over time and become crucial for building a good pension nest. And that is on top of the fact that they serve as an important incentive to contribute to their 401 (K) plans in the first place, Friedman said.

    But according to legal experts, it is generally in the company of a company to make changes to a 401 (K) plan in its own discretion.

    Joy Napier -Joyce, a lawyer established in Baltimore who focuses primarily on the benefits of employers, told Marketwatch that there is no rule that says a company should offer a 401 (K) program. But if so, “they reserve the right to change and change the conditions and even eliminate the plan.”