Health Savings Accounts: Do the Critics Have a Point?


 

Publication Date: May 2006

Publisher: Cato Institute

Author(s): Michael F. Cannon

Research Area: Health

Type: Report

Abstract:

Health savings accounts, or HSAs, are a new health insurance option that became available in 2004. HSAs couple a tax-preferred savings account (the HSA) with high-deductible health insurance. Enrollees or their employers, or both, make tax-free contributions to the HSA. Enrollees use the funds in their HSAs to purchase medical care until they reach their deductibles. At that point, health insurance begins paying part or all of enrollees' medical expenses.

HSAs reduce government's influence over consumers' medical decisions by reducing the price distortions created by the federal tax code. However, HSAs as they exist today do not eliminate those distortions. Current HSA law restricts consumers' health insurance choices, makes it difficult for the chronically ill to save for their future medical needs, and discourages cost sharing above the health insurance deductible.

Unfortunately, HSAs (and proposals to expand them) have become politicized. Critics contend that HSAs benefit only the healthy and the wealthy and that HSAs are ineffective or even harmful. In most cases, criticisms of HSAs fall flat. In some cases, the critics do have a point. However, the failures they identify stem not from HSAs or proposals to expand them but from the problems that HSAs are meant to correct. Expanding HSAs would help to correct those problems faster.