Workers’ Compensation is conceptually changing, and its
extinction is becoming more apparent rather than its transformation. Over the
past decades, the “grand bargain” of Workers’ Compensation had evolved to ease the American industrial/manufacturing revolution forward, without burden from the economic complexities and
ramifications of the Civil Justice System.
“The Promise” made in 1911, with the adoption of the compensation system, is now past history. The demands
of the globalized marketplace have eroded the fortress of workers’ compensation that
protected the rights, safety and lives of American workers.
Dynamic developments, occurring at an ever increasing pace, have altered
the landscape and accelerated a devastating attack on the citadel of
workers’ compensation. The root of the cause is economic.