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Published on Saturday, December 13, 2008 by CommonDreams.org
How the American Healthcare System Got That Way by Tim Costello, Jeremy Brecher and Brendan Smith As Americans respond to President-elect Obama call for town
hall meetings on reforming the American health care system, an understanding of
how that system came to be the way it is can be crucial for figuring out how to
fix it. The American health care system is unique because for most
of us it is tied to our jobs rather than to our government. For many Americans
the system seems natural, but few know that it originated, not as a well
thought out plan to provide for Americans' health, but as a way to circumvent a
quirk in wartime wage regulations that had nothing to do with health. As far back as the 1920s, a few big employers had offered
health insurance plans to some of their workers. But only a few: By 1935, only
about two million people were covered by private health insurance, and on the
eve of World War II there were only 48 job-based health plans in the entire
country. The rise of unions in the 1930s and 1940s led to the first
great expansion of health care for Americans. But ironically, it did not
produce a national plan providing health care to all like those in virtually
all other developed countries. Instead, the special conditions of World War II
produced the system of job-based health benefits we know today. In 1942 the U.S. set up a National War Labor Board. It had
the power to set a cap on all wage increases. But it let employers circumvent
the cap by offering "fringe benefits" -- notably health insurance.
The fringe benefits received a huge tax subsidy; they were treated as tax
deductible expenses for corporations but not as taxable income for workers. The result was revolutionary. Companies and unions quickly
negotiated new health insurance plans. Some were run by Blue Cross, Blue
Shield, and private insurance companies. Others were "Taft-Hartley
funds" run jointly by management and unions. By 1950, half of all
companies with less than 250 workers and two-thirds of all companies with more
than 250 workers offered health insurance of one kind or another. By 1965,
nearly three-quarters of the population were covered by some kind of private
health insurance. This private, job-based insurance covered millions of
workers who had never had health care insurance before. But this victory also
set patterns that are responsible for many of the problems the health care
system faces today. Because this private system was tied to employment, it did
not provide health insurance for all. Millions of people outside the workforce
were without coverage. Those most likely to be covered were salaried or
unionized white men in northern industrial states. Two-thirds of those with
incomes under $2,000 a year were not covered; so were nearly half of nonwhites
and those over 65. Employer-based plans tied workers to their jobs - something
that benefited employers, but not workers or the economy as a whole. The
quality of the coverage was spotty - some plans were excellent, others
completely inadequate. Doctors accepted this revolution because it didn't
challenge their power; but as a result the system provided no public control
over medical costs. This revolution had a subtle political effect as well. By
giving much of the workforce health benefits, it reduced the incentive for them
to pursue a system of universal care. And it gave unions a stake in the
private, employer-based health care system. As one opponent of publicly
financed health care put it, "the greatest bulwark" against "the
socialization of medicine" was "furthering the progress already made
by voluntary health insurance plans." Since then, many layers have been laid on top of
employer-based health care. Medicare and Medicaid provided government-funded
health insurance for the elderly and impoverished. The "managed care
revolution" led to the takeover of 90 percent of employer-based health
care by HMOs, most of them driven by profit rather than health concerns. But most
people continue to get their health care through their employer. Many of the problems of American health care grow out of
this history. The system is so complex that even experts - let alone ordinary
people trying to find care for themselves and their loved ones -- are unable to
fully understand it. The system spends one-third of its cost on paperwork,
waste, and profit over and above the cost of actually providing health care.
Yet nearly one-third of Americans are without health insurance over the course
of a year. In all other developed countries, more than 85% of citizens have
health coverage under public programs. The American health care system is full
of inequalities: People who work for one company may have high quality
insurance while those who work for a similar company have none. All of these problems are due at least in part to an
employer-based system whose original intent was not to provide quality health
care to all, but to circumvent wartime wage regulations. As we begin to debate
how to reform health care, we should keep in mind that the American health care
system was not created to express American values or to meet Americans' health
care needs. And knowing that, we should not be afraid to
change the system if we can come up with a better one. This piece is excerpted from DOCTOR WALL STREET: HOW THE
AMERICAN HEALTH CARE SYSTEM GOT SO SICK, from a popular pamphlet on the history
of the American healthcare system available for free download at http://laborstrategies.blogs.com/DoctorWallStreet.pdf
Tim Costello, Jeremy Brecher and
Brendan Smith are the co-founders of Global Labor Strategies, a resource center
providing research and analysis on globalization, trade and labor issues. GLS
staff have published many previous reports on a variety of labor-related
issues, including Outsource This! American Workers, the Jobs Deficit, and the
Fair Globalization Solution, Contingent Workers Fight For Fairness, and Fight
Where You Stand!: Why Globalization Matters in Your
Community and Workplace. They have also written and produced the Emmy-nominated
PBS documentary Global Village or Global Pillage? GLS has offices in New York,
Boston, and Montevideo, Uruguay. For more on GLS visit:
www.laborstrategies.blogs.com or email smithb28@gmail.com.
(from healthcareoregon Digest 1960) BREAKING NEWS!!!! |