Research Report Tax-Preferred Medical Savings Accounts and Catastrophic Health Insurance Plans
Subtitle
A Numerical Analysis of Winners and Losers
Len Nichols, Marilyn Moon, Susan Wall Wallin
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This paper uses nationally representative data to analyze the implications of introducing tax-favored medical savings accounts (MSAs) coupled with catastrophic health insurance plans into the mix of employer-sponsored health insurance arrangements. It address four areas: (1) the effect on national health expenditures if all employees switched to an MSA/catastrophic plan; (2) who would gain and who would lose financially, and by how much, if all workers switched to this plan; (3) the effect on premiums for comprehensive plans if this plan were added as a choice for all workers; and (4) how employers and workers would respond to these quantitative implications.
Research and Evidence Health Policy Work, Education, and Labor Family and Financial Well-Being Research to Action Upward Mobility
Expertise Upward Mobility and Inequality Wealth and Financial Well-Being Labor Markets Families Health Care Coverage, Costs, and Access
Tags Health insurance Employment and income data Wages and nonwage compensation Income and wealth distribution Financial stability Wages and economic mobility Family savings