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Britain: Media and big business denounce increase in public
health spending
By Julie Hyland
20 April 2002
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Chancellor Gordon Browns decision to increase taxation
in order to finance greater spending on the National Health Service
(NHS) has created uproar. The media has described his April 17
budget, with its one percent increase in National Insurance (NI)
payroll contributions, as a major gamble. Some even
warning darkly that it marks a return to the days of Old
Labour and squeezing the rich until the pips squeak.
Such mutterings have little to do with the economic reality
of the measures involved. Proportionately, the tax increase will
fall most heavily on working people, rather than the rich. Nonetheless,
the decision to increase direct taxes at all, and to levy the
tax across the board, as well as on employers NI contributions,
is regarded as a radical breech with the longstanding political
consensus first laid down by Conservative Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher.
Hugo Young summed up the fears generated by Browns decision
in the April 18 Guardian. The budget, asks a deep
question about the character of the British people... What sort
of society do they believe in? Never before had a budget
focused on a single issue, such as health service funding, he
continued. But this single issue is a metaphor for everything:
are you for or against a state called a welfare state?
Although distorted by the retrogressive method of taxation
used to fund the increase, it is precisely the question of the
survival of any form of publicly funded health service that has
caused outrage amongst sections of big business and their political
representatives.
For five years, the Blair government has emulated Conservative
policy on public spending. Thatchers infamous dictum that
there is no such thing as society summed up the attitude
of Britains rich, who regarded the welfare state as an unnecessary
infringement on their personal accrual of wealth and sought to
undermine and ultimately destroy it through privatisation, means-testing
and starving it of cash. The ruling class calculated that, faced
with school class sizes of 40 plus and months of waiting for vital
health care, many families would be forced into taking out private
provision, leaving a rump of publicly funded services that could
then be quickly dismembered.
But Britains elite has found it far easier to destroy
than to create. Twenty years on, the efforts to simply graft a
US-style private insurance model onto what had been one of the
most centralised, and universal systems of social provision in
the world has produced a disasterwith standards of transport,
health and education in Britain now amongst the worst in Europe.
Whilst increasing indirect taxationwhich falls most heavily
on the poorestto some of the highest levels in the world,
successive governments have held down public spending and cut
effective corporate taxes to 30 percent, lower than US, Germany
and Japan.
The Blair government was enthusiastic in its efforts to continue
this policy, but it has run up against objective difficultiesnamely
that it has become increasingly difficult to force one of the
lowest paid workforces in Europe to make expensive private personal
provision.
In addition, although much of the media has described the rise
in NI contributions as an attack on Middle England,
and therefore political suicide for Blair, in truth the systematic
under-funding of health care has always been highly dangerous
for the government as far as its support amongst the so-called
middle classes is concerned.
The reality of Britains welfare system does not correspond
to the government and the medias usual depictions of it
as simply a safety net for the poor. As Nicholas Timmins explains
in his seminal work on the welfare state, it was the extension
of public provision to the middle class after the Second World
War that was one of the defining shifts of the 1940s. In
Britain it meant that the middle class no longer had to pay the
market cost of private health care or take out private insurance.
No longer did they have to pay school fees. Indeed it is the huge
middle-class stake in free education and health care
that have made those the most enduring and popular features of
the welfare state (Timmins, N, The Five Giants, p.
163, Fontana [1996]).
For these reasons, take-up of private education and health
schemes remains low at around 10 percent of the population. Neither
has big business been willing to stump up the cash to help finance
more attractive private insurance plans, with the long-term view
of dismantling government provision.
This has left the government in a bind. As part of its pledge
to restructure public services, Blair commissioned a review of
the NHS, the first since 1948. Whilst the report, drawn up under
the stewardship of former National Westminster bank chief executive
Derek Wanless, was aimed at justifying a greater involvement by
private capital in public provision, its conclusions nevertheless
proved politically devastating for the government.
Securing our Future Health: Taking a Long Term view,
reports that health provision in the UK has been under-funded
to the tune of £200 billion over 30 years. Britain spends
just 6.8 percent of GDP on health care, in comparison to a European
Union average of 9 percent, he reported.
This lack of resources has been used by Conservatives and others
to demand the speedy introduction of full-scale private health
provision, but the Wanless report found that such a solution is
not as straight-forward as it seems, even for a government committed
to privatisation.
Brown hinted at these problems in his budget speech. Adopting
the US model was unfeasible, he intimated, because of its high
costs. Explaining the US experience, he said, Family premiums
average around £100 a week and are set to rise next year
on average by £13 a week, and because of its costs insures
only some of the people for some of their care. Top range
schemes in the UK are similarly priced, and beyond the reach of
most families.
What Brown did not say is that even the more expensive UK schemes
often do not cover previously existing medical conditions nor,
most importantly, emergency care. With or without private insurance,
anyone injured in a car crash for example is taken directly to
a NHS hospital because private hospitals concentrate only on the
most financially lucrative procedures. Indeed, those suffering
botched operations in private hospitalsduring childbirth
for examplehave to be transferred to NHS for emergency care,
demonstrating the parasitic relationship of the private sector
in the UK to the NHS.
Neither was the European model of social insurance an option,
Brown continued, mainly because of the financial burden on business.
In France, Brown said, the typical employer is paying £60
a week.
Wanless had ruled out both the US and European models in his
review. Substantial investment was needed quickly,
he stressed, in order to stop the system breaking down. NHS funding
would have to double by 2022, just to ensure adequate levels of
health care. The additional finances could then be used as a lever
to press through unpopular measures, such as across the board
charges for prescriptions and a restructuring of health workers
contracts.
The government has largely adopted the Wanless proposals. In
his budget speech, Brown said the additional increase in NI contributions
would help finance an additional £40 million spending on
the NHS over the next five years. At the same time, the chancellor
and Prime Minister Tony Blair went out of their way to reassure
big business that the government remains committed to its best
interests.
Writing in the Observer newspaper just days before the
budget, Blair had argued, There is a world of difference
between old style tax and spend where money went into
unreformed systems and New Labours invest and reform
where money is accounted for and services built around the system.
The establishment of a health audit system to oversee NHS spending
would link the money paid to benefits received, the
prime minister continued.
With his eye to the mass of working people who rely on the
NHS, he continued, Despite all the grand tours of European
capitals the Conservatives cannot escape the reality that other
countries health systems do not enjoy a superior system of funding.
They enjoy a superior level of funding. And it is the under-funding
which produced the under-capacity in doctors, nurses, beds and
buildings which we are reversing.
By increasing NI contributions, the government had sought a
means of raising sufficient revenue whilst having the least
impact on the rich and maintaining its pledge that it would
only borrow to invest. At least one Labour minister
was cited anonymously as stressing that Labour cannot be
seen as a party that wants to bash the rich. The amounts
pledged by Brown are less than those proposed by Wanless, a total
NHS spending commitment of £96 billion in 2007-08 compared
to a recommended £105.6 billion.
The Financial Times admitted that high earners
escaped relatively lightly in the budget. Previously no
additional NI contributions were levied on income above £30,940
a year. Browns one percent increase across the board will
mean, for example, that Matt Barrett, chief executive of Barclays
Bank, must pay an extra £18,620 on his annual income of
£1.86 million. In contrast, the FT continued, if the government
had removed the upper limit on NI contributions entirely it would
have cost Barrett more than £95,000.
Increasing NI contributions across the board, the paper went
on, means that the money will come almost equally from all
income groups, including lower and middle earners. Abolishing
the upper earnings limit would have put the burden mainly on top
earners.
The chancellor insisted that the budget would still mean Britain
was the most competitive and entrepreneurial economy in
Europe, and that even after the increase, tax as a proportion
of national income is 37 percent, 3.5 percent less than the EU
average. Only Spain and Irelands rate is lower. Moreover,
the extra funding would help renew a shared national consensus
around an NHS, freely accessible at the point of need, paid for
from taxation.
But big business, the Conservatives and the right wing press
are indifferent to the need to build political consensus. This
is a layer that has grown fat on impoverishing working people
and tearing up their basic democratic rights. As to the consequences
of millions being left without any form of basic health provision,
they care not one jot.
Nor are they impressed by the Chancellors argument that
their tax bill is much lower than it could have beenthey
do not want to pay anything at all. Business has complained that
it will bear the brunt of the NI increase, decrying it, as a tax
on jobs that would push its bills up by £4 billion.
The Confederation of British Industry said it proved Blair was
no longer concerned with the interests of business, whilst an
Engineering Employers Federation spokesman said its members felt
shafted by the government.
Sections of the press have accused the government of a lurch
to the left and even of socialism! In his Observer piece,
Blair had argued, The budget will crystallise for the country
a fundamental choice in values, not just policies. Do we believe
opportunities should be extended to all or remain the preserve
of the privileged few? That health care should be provided fairly
when you need it or left to your ability to pay? That a decent
education is the right of every child or only the few who pay
for it.
In his typical opportunistic fashion, the prime minister had
hoped his self-serving paean to social justice would help consolidate
support for his governments measures. But for ruling circles,
after decades in which any reference to equality has been rubbished
as dangerous nonsense, such talk is anathema. They are especially
concerned that in its bid to court popularity, Labour has inadvertently
opened the way for a sea change in public perception of the roots
of the countrys social and economic problems. The last thing
they are prepared to tolerate is a move away from the ritualistic
denunciations of the something for nothing society
and praise for the natural superiority of the free-market, towards
a discussion of an egalitarian model of society.
See Also:
Britain: Shock for millions
of workers who rely on private pensions
[26 March 2002]
Britain: opposition mounts
to Labours privatisation policies
[8 February 2002]
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