Seeking Common Ground: A History of Labor and Blue Cross
- 1 August 1991
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Duke University Press in Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law
- Vol. 16 (4) , 695-718
- https://doi.org/10.1215/03616878-16-4-695
Abstract
In recent years, voluntary health insurance costs have become a major source of friction in labor-management negotiations. What was once a “fringe” has led to job actions, strikes, and intensive bargaining. We examine the history of labor's participation in New York Blue Cross from the 1930s to the recent past and show that labor's participation in the plan was crucial to Blue Cross's success in the plan's early decades. By the late 1950s, serious tensions developed over rate increases and the participation of labor in Blue Cross governance. Ultimately, the issue was one of the control over what was provided by the plans and who would pay for the costs of care. We posit that labor was never able to achieve an important role in the control of the third-party payer, and in the antilabor environment of the 1980s this proved detrimental to labor's interests.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- 'Slaves of the Depression': Workers' Letters about Life on the JobLabour / Le Travail, 1988
- Workers' Health, Workers' DemocracyPublished by Cornell University Press ,1988
- The Fall of the House of LaborPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1987
- Health Policies, Health PoliticsPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1986
- Political Incorporation and the Extrusion of the Left: Party Politics and Social Forces in New York CityStudies in American Political Development, 1986
- Women at Work. the Transformation of Work and Community in Lowell, Massachusetts, 1826–1860Published by Columbia University Press ,1979