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Plus: Why caps on gas prices don’t work in the U.S. 
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Gas prices keep going up, and in other parts of the world, governments are limiting prices at the pump to help struggling consumers. We’ll explain why price caps are unlikely in the U.S. We also look at what to expect from new inflation data, and a report on why more Americans are buying second-hand clothes. We’ll start off today by demystifying health savings accounts. Blake Farmer from Nashville Public Radio has the pros and cons.  — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor
A health savings account form with a calculator, a pen and $100 bills.
JJ Gouin/Getty Images
HSAs: The hype and headaches of a "triple tax advantage"
A provision in the One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act expands access to health savings accounts, but HSAs work best for people with disposable income to set aside, and even then, most enrollees spend their balances down before they can invest.
As a musician, Mike McKee has always been self-employed and on his own for insurance. That means going with high-deductible plans. They’re less expensive each month but leave you with bigger medical bills.

The high-cost plans also allow you to start a tax-shielded health savings account, or HSA. But he never has.

“The math didn’t math for me,” he said.

A provision buried in the Big, Beautiful Bill allows more Americans to open HSAs . They’re meant to help us pay for rising out-of-pocket expenses. But HSAs are also hyped as an investment vehicle. It’s just that the “H” in HSA can also feel like it stands for “headache.”

McKee would rather save in more straightforward ways, such as retirement accounts for him and his wife or college savings for their kid. Plus, medical bills seem like “funny money.” If something catastrophic happens, you almost certainly won’t have enough and can beg for mercy — a position he’s found himself in.

“I’m so frustrated with the system that anything to do with medical savings and stuff, I’m just so turned off emotionally that I have to be really careful to be logical about it,” McKee said.

Previously, he also thought that HSAs had a use-it-or-lose-it requirement, like the similarly named Flex Spending Accounts, or FSAs. Not so. Any money socked away in an HSA is yours for life.

With out-of-pocket costs going up constantly, more plans are eligible for HSAs, not just those deemed high-deductible plans. This year, catastrophic and bronze-level plans on the federal health insurance marketplace are HSA eligible. At this point, roughly a third of all privately insured individuals are covered by an HSA which can be used for medical bills, medications, glasses, orthodontia, and many kinds of therapy.

In terms of savings vehicles, there aren’t many better deals. HSA money goes in and comes out tax free. And if you build up a balance, you can invest it in the stock market. Those gains aren’t taxed either. It’s often called a “triple tax advantage.”

“The small share of people who do choose to invest, and it is very small, could certainly see some benefits if they keep that money in there over time,” said Michelle Long, a senior policy manager with KFF.
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers:
  • Stocks inched up today on March’s better-than-expected employment numbers, released last week. The S&P 500 rose 0.4%, as did the Dow. The Nasdaq gained 0.5%.
      
  • A barrel of oil rose 0.8% for both benchmarks: West Texas Intermediate closed at $112.41, while Brent crude was $109.77. The national average for a gallon of regular gas was $4.11 today, AAA said.

  • Some countries in Europe and Asia are temporarily capping gas prices. But  there’s an advantage to feeling the bite of a scarce, expensive commodity, an MIT economist told us. 

  • Today’s Purchasing Managers Index showed prices service businesses paid for what they need shot up 7.7 percentage points in March — the index’s highest level since October 2022. We’ll get more data this week on how much the Iran war has raised prices, and what that’s meant for the Fed’s fight against inflation. Here’s our preview.   
 
Your money
  • Sales of secondhand clothing are taking up an increasingly large slice of the retail pie, driven by younger generations and sustainability concerns. How will the fashion industry adapt? 

  •  The IRS has shut down its direct online tax-filing program after opposition from the tax software industry and Republican lawmakers. But there are still free options for preparing and filing your taxes before the April 15 deadline.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“What California is seeking to do here is essentially just cut all kids off from the major platforms and places where people are talking online and engaging in a wide variety of speech.”
— Aaron Mackey, Electronic Frontier Foundation’s free speech and transparency litigation director
California is trying again to protect kids from the harms of social media by banning those under 16 from using it. Free speech advocates like Mackey say bans will create more problems by violating minors’ First Amendment rights. Age verification gates used to implement such bans violate adults’ rights as well, Mackey said. But legislative solutions are preferable to regulating the industry by individual jury trial, Mackey said. If the landmark cases that found Meta and YouTube liable for designing products addictive to young users are upheld, it could affect people’s ability to share information on social media platforms, he said.
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A map of Pasadena, California, showing area's electric rates.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Final note
His perfect cup of joe
There are only three items on the menu at Graffeo, San Francisco’s oldest coffee roaster: dark roast, light roast and decaf. That’s beans — no steaming mugs here, no pastries, just a roasting process perfected over the past 41 years, owner Walter Haas III told us. If focusing on that limits growth, so be it. Our David Brancaccio is feeling “business envy.” In another life, he would have been roasting instead of hosting.
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