What the free market solution encourages between employers and employees is trust, cooperation, and mutual accountability
Stop me if you’ve heard this one before
writes
Carine Martinez-Gouhier.
Texas makes everybody better off by
reducing government intervention in their lives. Because of this
success, other states emulate the Lone Star state. Then proponents of
big government in Washington, D.C. get nervous and start attacking
Texans as impractical ideologues that don’t care about workers, the
poor, or people in general.
… [And yet] the benefits of Texas’ approach are
undeniable. The solution encourages trust, cooperation, and mutual
accountability between employers and employees. Employers that choose to
offer a private benefit plan are not relieved from their liability for
possible negligence as they would be under the state system. The
exposure creates an incentive for the employer to proactively make the
workplace safer to prevent as many work-related injuries or illnesses as
possible. In exchange, employees are often expected to quickly report
injuries so that medical care can start early, as well as facilitate
employees’ recoveries and timely returns to work.
… The more businesses can compete for employees, the more workers benefit.
Of
course, employers benefit too. When employers are free to shop for
benefit plans, insurance companies have to compete for employers’
business, which tends to drive prices down. Insurance companies can also
offer solutions tailored to an employer’s specific activity, instead of
offering an expensive one-size-fits-all solution. Lower costs mean
employers can focus on better care for injured workers too and also
provide a strong incentive for them to keep workers away from harm.
Overall, employers and employees interact far more in nonsubscription
than in the state system.
Carine Martinez-Gouhier is a policy analyst and the managing editor of the Center for Economic Freedom at the Texas Public Policy Foundation.
No comments:
Post a Comment