Thursday, April 16, 2020
Best Job Perks SunTrust Offers $1,000 for Emergency Funds
Best Job Perks SunTrust Offers $1,000 for Emergency Funds Forget a ping-pong table in the office. The hot new job perk is something far more practical and worthwhile. As the New York Times reported, SunTrust Banks is expanding a financial wellness program to employers all over the country that in some cases gives $1,000 toward employee emergency funds, as well as an extra day off work for employees to organize their finances. SunTrust introduced the program to its own employees two years ago, and a press release sent out this week by the bank says that more than two dozen other companiesâ"including Home Depot, Delta Airlines, Waffle House, and 1-800-CONTACTSâ"have already begun offering some of these special perks to their employees. The program, which is called âMomentum onUp,â and which SunTrust says it offers to employers on an âat costâ not-for-profit basis, is yielding significant benefits for workers, the bank says. According to a survey of participants, the percentage of employees living on a budget increased from 43% to 87%; workers with emergency savings increased from 68% to 98%; and worker retirement contributions increased by 35%. One of the programâs pillars is encouraging employees to start an emergency fund. According to one recent survey, only 31% of Americans have an adequate amount of emergency savingsâ"generally defined as enough to cover oneâs expenses for six months. SunTrust matches up to $1,000 in employee contributions to their emergency funds, though not all of the companies participating in the bankâs financial wellness program give money to workersâ emergency savings. Overall, the program is intended to educate workers and help them organize their finances, with online videos and live instruction on issues like paying off debt, improving credit scores, and budgeting for major expenses like weddings and kidsâ college. As for the special day off work devoted to organizing oneâs finances, this too is a perk offered by SunTrust but not necessarily by the companies participating in the bankâs financial wellness program. The conceptâ"the equivalent of a mental health day, but focused instead on fiscal healthâ"appears to have been first floated back in 2009 by New York Timesâ personal finance guru Ron Lieber. Even as pensions disappear and employers have grown less generous with 401(k) matches, 83% of companies say they feel responsible for employeesâ financial wellness, according to one survey. And the wellness program trend is growing: A Bank of America Merrill Lynch report estimates that 90% of large firms will offer financial wellness programs as part of their normal benefits package within a decade.
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