Testimony Health Savings Accounts and High Deductible Health Insurance Plans: Implications for those with High Medical Costs, the Low-Income, and the Uninsured
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Before the Committee on Ways and Means, Subcommittee on Health, United States House of Representatives
Linda J. Blumberg
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HSAs are highly tax-advantaged savings vehicles that are most attractive to the high income and those with low health service use. They are unlikely to significantly decrease the number of uninsured, who often have low incomes, do not benefit significantly from the tax advantages, nor have assets to cover the large deductibles associated with the plans. Their ability to reduce system wide spending is also limited. HSAs have the potential to increase segmentation of health care risk in private insurance markets, unless employers set premiums to offset the healthier selection or government subsidizes the costs of the remaining comprehensive coverage market.
Research and Evidence Health Policy Family and Financial Well-Being
Expertise Wealth and Financial Well-Being Health Care Coverage, Costs, and Access Modeling Federal and State Health System Reform
Tags Health insurance Federal health care reform Health equity Private insurance Financial stability