MSAs HRAs, HSAs: Which Health Plan Is Right for My Small Business?
By Tony Novak, MBA. MT, OnlineAdviserTM services at Freedom Benefits
Three types of consumer-driven health plans now compete for the attention of
small businesses and self-employed individuals:Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs),
Health Reimbursement Arrangements or Health Reimbursement Accounts (HRAs) and
Health Savings Accounts (HSAs). All of these plans are relatively new methods to
improve the financing of health care expenses.Each type of health plan has the
potential to significantly reduce overall health care costs and improve the
level of satisfaction with health benefits. Yet the health plan needs of
self-employed people and small businesses vary widely.
Understanding the basic features of each of these types of new health plans will
enable each business operator to pick a plan that will provide the best
benefits.
The term “consumer-driven” means that medical care spending decisions for
routine health care are made at the individual employee/consumer level rather
than as business purchase decisions. The financial effects of those day-to-day health care
purchase decisions – whether positive or negative - are felt by the individual
employee rather than the business or health maintenance organization. The net
effect of converting to a consumer-driven health plan is that costs are lower
and employee satisfaction is higher.
This article omits discussion of several other types of health plans available to small businesses and self-employed individuals. These are:
1)
Fully insured health plans – Traditional health plans have low
deductibles and no financial incentive for consumers to conserve spending. These
are fading in popularity due to high cost and intolerance with health insurance
company claims handling procedures.
2)
HMOs – managed care plans standardize many medical care decisions at the
organizational level and are based on exactly the opposite design theory of
consumer-driven health plans. HMOs are to socialism what consumer-driven health plans
are to capitalism.
3)
Section 125 Flexible Spending Account (FSA) Plans – these are typically
used to provide a variety of employee benefits beyond health plans. While these
plans can be very effective and popular in a business, the advantages are not
primarily in the area of providing pure health benefits.
Medical Savings Accounts (MSAs) have been available to small businesses since
1996 but few have taken advantage of them.The primary reason was the difficulty
in finding MSA-qualified health insurance. Less than 100,000 small businesses
use MSA plans today. MSAs will no longer be started after December 31, 2003 and
eventually those existing plans will convert to another type of more attractive
plan. For more information online, see
www.Freedom Benefits/msa.htm.
Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs) were introduced in 2002 and have become
the plan of choice for small and mid-sized firms for providing health benefits
to employees.There are many strong advantages to these plans detailed in other
recent articles. Many of these plans utilize a business bank account debit card
that is held by the individual employees to pay for routine health care
expenses; hence the name “Health Reimbursement Accounts” has become more popular
among promoters of these plans.For more information online, see
www.FreedomBenefits.org.
Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) will debut in 2004. These plans will essentially
take over the market for healthy self-employed individuals, small businesses and
healthy individuals who buy their own health insurance.HSAs are far superior to
MSAs, and most MSA owners will want to convert as soon as HSAs become
available.For more information online see
www.HealthSavingsAccount-hsa.com.
The attractive features that all three of these health plans have in common
include:
1)
Use low cost health insurance plans
2)
Allow a carry-over of unused funds from year-to-year by the employee
3)
Financially reward employees for making conservative spending decisions
4)
Make available 100% coverage tax-free health benefits
5)
Allow liberal preventative care, alternate care, vision and dental care
benefits
6) Bypass and eliminate insurance for most routine health care
7) Allow tax-deductible deposits and tax-free withdrawals.
|
|
MSAs |
HRAs |
HSAs |
|
Primary Advantages |
May be funded by either the employer or the employee (but not both) |
Unrestricted insurance options May be completely uninsured
Cost is most easily controlled by the business
Unlimited maximum benefits
High level of employee satisfaction |
Available to individuals as well as businesses
Wider choice of low cost insurance plans than MSAs
Lower insurance policy deductibles than MSAs
Higher tax-deductible contribution limits than MSAs
Tax-free rollover of excess funds to an IRA |
|
Primary Disadvantages |
Only available to self-employed persons and small businesses
Severe restrictions on health insurance allowed
Few account trustees or health insurance providers
Not popular with employees |
Funded only by the employer
Voluntary employee contributions are not allowed
Restricted benefits for owners of S corps., partners or sole proprietors
Independent claim verification required
Higher administrative cost for very small companies |
May be difficult to merge with firms that offer only traditional health
plans or HMOs For individual or family plans, currently only healthy applicants will qualify |
Best-Suited Use |
Self-employed individual |
Employees of small or mid-sized business |
Anyone enrolled in the HSA qualified high deductible insurance |
|
Total Annual Administrative Cost |
$751 |
$1502 |
$751 |
| Online Enrollment Site | n/a (manual enrollment only) | www.FreedomBenefits.org | www.healthsavingsaccount-hsa.com |
1Includes
the total estimated cost of all set-up and administrative functions for a full
year for one person or family.
2Includes the total cost for a a business with up to 5 employees.
The details and operating procedures of HSAs are not known at this time, since
these plans will not actually be offered until next year. Much of the success of
these plans will rest with the companies that promote and administer them.
When designing benefits for a small business, it is not necessary to choose one
of these health plans exclusively over another. It is possible and usually
desirable to mix and match benefits for the best overall result. A small business with an HRA plan, for example, may also
offer a FSA plan to employees and often provides the owner with health insurance
outside the HRA plan and allows an HSA account as well.
In most cases the best results can be achieved by combining two health benefit
plan designs, possibly even overlapping and incorporating retirement plans and
other fringe benefits.
Finally consider that each of these plans has the effect of reducing overall
health care costs immediately, but none are proven to have any effect on the
real underlying long-term problem of hyperinflation in health care costs. At
this point, unfortunately, a small business still needs to budget an annual
spending increase of more than 12% per year just to maintain the same level of
health care into the future.Obviously this issue must also be addressed, but
that is far beyond the scope of this article.
In summary, the HSA will likely become the plan of choice for self-employed
individuals (including owner/employees of most businesses) and the HRA is the
most attractive way to provide health benefits to employees.
