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Individual Health Savings Account
Health Savings Accounts: The News Keeps Getting Better
By Derek Hunter
There is good news in the world of
health insurance. While premiums for traditional
insurance continue to rise, premiums for one kind of
insurance are decreasing. That option, the Health
Savings Account, gives consumers real choice, offering a
variety of plans to fit a wide range of needs and
budgets.
HSAs were created as part of the
Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 and offer consumers
new, more affordable options in health insurance. HSAs
allow their owners to save money tax-free, and their
employers to contribute to those savings tax-free, when
they purchase a qualified high-deductible health
insurance plan. These savings, in turn, can be used to
cover out-of-pocket health care expenses. Qualified
high-deductible plans must have deductibles between
$1,000 and $2,650 for individuals and between $2,000 and
$5,250 for families, bringing maximum total
out-of-pocket expenses (including deductibles, co-pays,
and co-insurance) to $5,100 for individuals and $10,200
for families.
HSAs and Premiums
Average premiums for
employer-sponsored health insurance have been rising
steadily since 1996. They rose 11.2 percent in 2004, a
slight decrease from 2003’s 13.9 percent increase but
still significantly above inflation.
While the data available on HSAs is
limited, as they have been available for less than 2
years, the early results are promising.
According to sales data from
ehealthinsurance.com, the average premium for an
individual HSA-qualified high-deductible plan dropped 19
percent in the first 6 months of 2005 relative to the
2004 price, from $137.94 to $111.57 per month.
Total savings from this drop, on
average, amount to $316.44 per year.
Those aged 45 to 64 and purchasing
HSAs saw the most dramatic price reductions, with
average monthly premiums falling from $225.05 in 2004 to
$187.07 in the first six months of 2005. That works out
to annual average savings of $455.76.
One of the most appealing aspects
of high-deductible health plans is that purchasers can
choose what level of deductible they wish to carry,
balancing the chance of higher-than-expected health care
expenses against savings from lower premiums. The data
show that consumers are taking full advantage of this
choice. Among the HSA-eligible high-deductible plans
sold by ehealthinsurance.com in the first half of 2005,
14.9 percent cost less than $50 or less, 47.7 percent
cost $51 to $100 per month, and 30.1 percent cost $101
to $200 per month.
These figures contrast sharply with
premiums for other types of health insurance. A survey
of employer-provided health insurance premiums shows
these plans to be significantly more expensive than
HSA-coupled high-deductible plans. In 2004, the average
monthly premium for an individual with employer provided
traditional, HMO, PPO, and POS insurance plans totaled
$308 per month—almost $200 more than the latest average
premium for HSA-coupled plans.
HSA plans are also less expensive
than traditional insurance purchased in the individual
market. People enter the individual market for many
reasons—it may be, for example, because they cannot get
health insurance through their workplace, do not think
the insurance offered by their employer meets their
needs, or are self-employed. According to a recent
study, while traditional insurance in the individual
market, with an average premium of $3,368 per year,
costs less than employer-provided plans, it is still
more expensive than HSA-eligible plans. The good news in
this data is consumers have more options than they may
realize in the individual market.
The premium difference between HSA
plans and traditional plans holds steady as individuals
age. For those between 45 and 64 and purchasing an
HSA-eligible plan, annual premiums ($2,244, on average)
are roughly 3 times what an individual between 18 and 24
would pay ($786).
For those between 45 and 64 and
purchasing a traditional plan, annual premiums ($3,470)
are roughly 3 times what an individual between 18 and 24
would pay ($1,170).
These differences in the costs of
traditional insurance plans versus HSA-eligible plans
add up to real consumer choice. HSA-eligible plans are
less expensive than traditional plans, but the consumer
can decide whether lower premiums are worth higher
out-of-pocket costs. Some consumers may decide that the
ability to save for out-of-pocket costs tax-free and
roll over unspent monies from year to year is the right
choice for them—with HSAs, they have that choice.
Out-of-Pocket Choice
By definition, high-deductible
health insurance plans come with higher out-of-pocket
costs than traditional insurance, and this is why their
premiums are significantly lower than traditional health
insurance premiums. With HSAs, consumers can choose the
level of maximum out-of-pocket expense that they find
comfortable and can afford. Meanwhile, individuals and
their employers can set aside money in an HSA, tax-free,
to cover some or all of these out-of-pocket costs. Of
the plans sold by ehealthinsurance.com to individuals in
the first half of 2005, 51.1 percent limited
out-of-pocket expenses to $5,100 (the maximum allowed by
law), 32 percent limited out-of-pocket expenses to
between $2,500 and $5,099, and 16.8 percent limited
out-of-pocket expenses to between $1,000 (the minimum to
qualify for an HSA by law) and $2,499.
Similar diversity was also evident
among family plans. Nearly one-third of family plans
sold, 31.6 percent, came with out-of-pocket maximums of
$10,000 or more ($10,200 is the maximum allowed by law),
while 41.6 percent limited out-of-pocket expenses to
between $5,000 and $9,999, and 19 percent to between
$2,500 and $4,999.
HSAs and the Uninsured
With HSA-eligible plans costing
significantly less than traditional insurance plans,
many uninsured individuals are getting into HSAs. Just
under half of ehealthinsurance.com’s HSA customers in
the first half of 2005 with incomes below $15,000 were
uninsured for at least 6 months.
For those with incomes between
$15,001 and $35,000, 43.4 percent were previously
uninsured.
Even some higher-income individuals
who were previously uninsured purchased HSA-eligible
health plans. Over 20 percent of ehealthinsurance.com’s
customers earning over $100,000 had been uninsured for
at least the previous 6 months.
Conclusion
The evidence that Health Savings
Accounts can make health insurance more affordable, give
consumers greater choice and flexibility, and thereby
reduce the number of uninsured is mounting. While the
critics have been mostly wrong in their predictions—for
example, that HSAs would serve only the healthy,
wealthy, and young—HSA proponents have seen the
accounts’ promise quickly fulfilled.
Health Savings Accounts are not the
silver bullet of health policy but a tool with the
potential to make a positive difference in Americans’
lives. Broader reform of the tax treatment of health
insurance and health care is essential to make markets
work better while expanding access and choice of
insurance coverage options. Still, as more and more
people choose HSAs, premiums will become even more
competitive, perhaps even falling further as their
market share grows. While not a panacea, health savings
accounts are a valuable part of the continuing effort to
bring affordable health insurance to more Americans.
Derek Hunter is a Research Associate in the Center for Health Policy Studies at The
Heritage Foundation.
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