医疗改革对灵活支出账户限制的分配效应

Q3 Economics, Econometrics and Finance Forum for Health Economics and Policy Pub Date : 2012-11-19 DOI:10.1515/1558-9544.1310
J. Cardon, J. Moore, M. Showalter
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引用次数: 3

摘要

灵活支出账户(FSAs)是一种广泛使用的安排,允许员工用税前美元支付合格的自付医疗费用。给予金融服务机构的税收优惠一直存在争议,最近的医疗保健法(《患者保护和可负担医疗法案》和《医疗保健和教育和解法案》)将税收减免限制在通货膨胀调整后的2500美元(2013年5美元)。据估计,这一限制将在2013年至2019年期间使联邦工资和所得税收入增加130亿美元。但这一变化对福利的影响尚不清楚。本文使用一个独特的面板数据集来探索可能受增税影响的家庭的人口统计概况。我们使用了1998年至2008年期间观察到的19,322个家庭的样本。这些数据包括金融服务厅支出、承保医疗和牙科支出的保险索赔信息以及家庭人口统计信息。我们通过收入和健康状况来探索FSA的使用模式。我们发现,可能受到增税影响的家庭往往是患有一种或多种慢性健康状况的家庭。慢性疾病的存在与相对较高和持续的医疗费用有关,也与相对年长和富裕的家庭有关。我们估计2013年1390万拥有FSA的家庭平均增税101美元。
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The Distributional Effects of Health Reform Limits on Flexible Spending Accounts
Abstract Flexible spending accounts (FSAs) are a widely used arrangement that allow employees to pay for qualified out-of-pocket health expenses with pre-tax dollars. The tax preference given to FSAs has been controversial and recent health care law (Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act) limits the tax exclusion to an inflation-adjusted value of $2,500 (2013 $s). The limit is estimated to increase federal payroll and income tax receipts by $13 billion between 2013 and 2019. But the welfare implications of this change are unclear.This paper uses a unique panel dataset to explore the demographic profile of households likely to be affected by the tax increase. We use a sample of 19,322 households observed over the period 1998–2008. The data include FSA expenditures, insurance claim information for covered medical and dental expenditures, and household demographic information. We explore patterns of FSA usage by income and health status.We find that households likely to be affected by the tax increase disproportionately tend to be households experiencing one or more chronic health conditions. The existence of chronic illness is associated with relatively high and persistent medical expenses and also with relatively older and wealthier households. We estimate an average tax increase of $101 in 2013 for 13.9 million households with an FSA.
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来源期刊
Forum for Health Economics and Policy
Forum for Health Economics and Policy Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: Forum for Health Economics & Policy (FHEP) showcases articles in key substantive areas that lie at the intersection of health economics and health policy. The journal uses an innovative structure of forums to promote discourse on the most pressing and timely subjects in health economics and health policy, such as biomedical research and the economy, and aging and medical care costs. Forums are chosen by the Editorial Board to reflect topics where additional research is needed by economists and where the field is advancing rapidly. The journal is edited by Katherine Baicker, David Cutler and Alan Garber of Harvard University, Jay Bhattacharya of Stanford University, Dana Goldman of the University of Southern California and RAND Corporation, Neeraj Sood of the University of Southern California, Anup Malani and Tomas Philipson of University of Chicago, Pinar Karaca Mandic of the University of Minnesota, and John Romley of the University of Southern California. FHEP is sponsored by the Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics at the University of Southern California. A subscription to the journal also includes the proceedings from the National Bureau of Economic Research''s annual Frontiers in Health Policy Research Conference. Topics: Economics, Political economics, Biomedical research and the economy, Aging and medical care costs, Nursing, Cancer studies, Medical treatment, Others related.
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