Affiliation:
1. Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy, University of Virginia (email: )
Abstract
To lower health care costs, Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) offer tax incentives encouraging people to trade off current consumption against future consumption. This paper tests whether consumers use HSAs as self-insurance over the life cycle. Using administrative data from a large employer and a regression discontinuity design, I estimate the marginal propensity to consume from HSA assets is 0.85 and reject the neoclassical benchmark of 0. Comparisons with 401(k) saving show most employees do not treat HSA money as fungible with retirement savings. In this setting, HSAs did not reduce health spending and instead increased the share that was financed tax-free. (JEL D15, D82, G22, G51, I13)
Publisher
American Economic Association
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Reference99 articles.
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