Wal-Mart makes a turn-around on health care
For much of the past decade, the retailing behemoth Wal-Mart has been associated with stingy health care as much as low prices. Across the United States, politicians and labor groups derided the company's health plans for their high expense and bare-bones coverage. Two states, California and Maryland, even passed laws demanding, in effect, that the company spend more on employee health benefits. "We want this giant to behave itself," one Maryland legislator, Anne Healey, said at the time. The giant, it turns out, was listening. All the criticism was hurting its reputation and its ability to expand. So now, after spending two years seeking advice from everyone from Bill Clinton to executives at Starbucks, Wal-Mart is overhauling its health plans.
See "Wal-Mart makes a turn-around on health care", Michael Barbaro and Reed Abelson, International Herald Tribune, November 12, 2007