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Employee cost-sharing and the welfare effects of flexible spending accounts

Employee cost-sharing and the welfare effects of flexible spending accounts

By Jack, William

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Publish Date

2005

Publisher

National Bureau of Economic Research

Language

eng

Pages

31

Description:

"In recent years, employees have been shouldering an increasing share of the costs of employee-provided health care. At the same time, more and more employers have been allowing employees to pay their out-of-pocket health care costs using pre-tax earnings, through tax-subsidized flexible spending accounts (FSAs). We use a cross-section of firm-level data from 1993 to show empirically that these FSAs can explain a significant fraction of the shift in health care costs to employees, and to evaluate the welfare impact of this shift. Correcting for selection effects, we find that FSAs are associated with insurance contracts with coinsurance rates that are about 7 percentage points higher, relative to a sample average coinsurance rate of 17 percent. Meanwhile, coinsurance rates net of the subsidy are approximately unchanged, providing evidence that FSAs are welfare-neutral"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.