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Britain: Private capital and the crisis in the National Health
Service
By Robert Stevens
9 March 2006
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The sudden departure of Sir Nigel Crisp from his post as Chief
Executive at the British National Health Service has highlighted
the financial crisis within the state-run system.
Crisp announced his early retirement on March 7, as the NHS
was expected to announce a record deficit of almost £800
million.
Central to this crisis is the Private Finance Initiative (PFI),
first introduced in 1992 by the Conservative government as a means
of privatising essential services by stealth. Under PFI, private
sector corporations design, build, own and operate public services
in return for an annual fee for the duration of the contract,
typically 25 to 35 years. PFI capital investment in the NHS is
set to reach £7 billion capital by 2010.
The PFI system has been expanded under Labour. Whilst it has
proven a financial boon for big business, however, it has been
nothing short of a disaster for public health and is bleeding
the NHS dry.
In February the Observer newspaper reported that one
of the governments flagship PFI-funded hospitals, the Darent
Valley hospital in Dartford, Kent, has been forced to ban
non-emergency surgery after doctors cut long waiting lists by
carrying out too many operations. These operations
include gynaecological, urological and orthopaedic procedures.
The hospital was the first major PFI scheme introduced when
Labour assumed office in 1997. It has been told to scale back
its patient operations by local health officials on the basis
that it was over performinga euphemism for spending
too much money on routine patient care, including basic operations.
From the next financial year, hospitals will be paid per patient
on a set tariff. This has already had a large-scale impact; hospitals
are being instructed to implement savings in preparation for the
implementation of financing by results. At the Darent Valley hospital
three wards are now closed and about 200 patients are to have
their admission or appointment delayed.
Darent Valleys crisis is merely the tip of the iceberg.
It follows a report at the end of last year that Health Secretary
Patricia Hewitt is ordering hit squads into 50 health
authorities and trusts in England to prevent further overspending.
In the counties of Devon and Cornwall, there is an almost total
ban on routine surgery. At the Royal Cornwall hospital in Truro
surgeons have been instructed to increase their waiting lists.
One staff member told the Observer newspaper that, We
cant see any outpatients until theyve waited at least
11 weeks, and we cant operate until theyve waited
an additional 24 weeks. This is ludicrous.
Across England more than 900 NHS beds used for maternity, elderly
and general hospital care have been closed due to financial pressures.
A further 500 beds, mostly in smaller community hospitals, are
scheduled for closure by primary care trusts over the next year.
Another hospital facing cuts and possible closure is the Charing
Cross hospital in west London. Charing Cross is a renowned teaching
hospital that has been forced to cut operations as it is saddled
with a £35 million deficit.
According to a survey of all NHS Trusts conducted by the BBC,
the health service has a debt totalling £1.07 billion. Some
of the trust surveyed revealed that they would need to take immediate
action to stem debts including closures, redundancies or cancelled
surgery.
West Midlands NHS is expected to announce debts of more than
£200 million by April, for example, and the NHS in Shropshire
has accumulated debt of £55 million and there are proposals
to close three area community hospitals.
Most of the NHS debt is accounted for by London and Home County
trusts in the southeast of England. These trusts account for nearly
a quarter of NHS debt in England. The largest reported debt for
any one health trust was for the Hammersmith Hospitals NHS Trust
in London, which has a debt £16.2 million. In an attempt
to scale back the debt, the trust has begun to implement a series
of cost-cutting measures, including the loss of 300 jobs.
In December, the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford announced
that up to 100 patients receiving cardiac ablation therapy were
being withdrawn from the treatment. Cardiac ablation therapy controls
an irregular heartbeat and is a vital procedure for those with
such a condition. The hospital said that a £15.1 million
budget deficit meant only those with life-threatening conditions
were to be treated.
It is now estimated that the total market for buying and selling
stakes in PFI hospitals and schools could be more than £6
billion. Darent Valley hospital is a prime case in point. Last
year it was announced that companies which had originally funded
the building of the hospital has earned a return of up to 50 percent
a year for its investors. Four companies which invested £13
million in the hospital in 1997 realised £37 million in
2003 under a refinancing dealan annual rate of return of
25 percent.
In March 2005, The National Audit Office (NAO) report on Darent
Valley found that companies were directly profiteering from PFI
deals. The report found that when the contracting firm THC Dartford
refinanced its original loan at a lower interest rate in 2003
it raised an extra £33 million and was able to realise much
higher profits60 percent higher than expectedfor the
firms shareholders. THC Dartford had taken out the loan
to finance building work as part of the Darent Valley Hospital
PFI scheme.
In December 2003, Carillion, formerly Tarmac, sold its £4
million share of THC Dartford to Barclays Infrastructure Ltd and
raised £16 million in the process. The firm duly informed
its shareholders that it had that it generated proceeds
of £16 million and a net exceptional profit of £11.2
million.
Such get-rich-quick schemes have also become get
rich for a long time to come, as the refinancing of contracts
also invariably involves extending them. The NHS Trust running
Darent Valley hospital agreed to extend the contract another seven
years to 35 years in exchange for a small share of the re-financing
gains.
It has been estimated that the Trust may have to pay contractors
more than the original cost of the hospital if they want to terminate
the contract early.
A 2004 report issued by the Association of Chartered Certified
Accountants (ACCA) found that between 2000 and 2003, 26 percent
of the increase in NHS income went towards paying PFI charges
for new hospitals. Due to the inherently expensive basis of PFI
financing the government has paid up to 30 percent more in construction
costs for hospitals built under PFI.
The ACCA predicted that PFI may lead to a loss of benefits
in kind and a redistribution of income, from the public to the
corporate sector. It has boosted the construction industry, many
of whose PFI subsidiaries are now the most profitable parts of
their enterprises, and led to a significant expansion of the facilities
management sector. But the main beneficiaries are likely to be
the financial institutions whose loans are effectively underwritten
by the taxpayers, as evidenced by the renegotiation of the Royal
Armouries PFI.
This assessment has been more than vindicated.
Another way of squeezing money from the public sector through
PFI has been devised by the private firms. At Darent Valley hospital,
an investigation by the GMB trade union found that PFI contractors
were charging enormous fees to carry out essential routine labour
not strictly covered by the wording of its contract. The union
claims the company has sent bills for £423 to fit a light
socket, £333 to modify a light socket, £25 to cut
a door key and £136 to put up a shelf.
Far from condemning these fraudulent activities, the governments
Department of Health lauded the hospital as a success story and
that it would be the blueprint for plans for 64 similar projects.
The large-scale asset-stripping also finds expression in the
widening pay gap between hospital trust directors and executives
and general NHS staff. A survey by the Incomes Data Services found
that the pay and perks package of NHS chief executives has gone
up 78 percent over the past decade. In the same period nurses
pay has risen by only 50 percent.
NHS chief executives earnings now stand at more than
£200,000 per annum at some hospitals. In 2005, the Guardian
newspaper reported that the top paid chief executive of a London
trust earned between £210,000 and £215,000 last financial
yearabout 35 percent more than his remuneration the year
before. Crisp himself received a salary of £195,000 per
annum and expected to receive a large financial pay-off.
See Also:
Britain: National Health
Service faces funding crisis
[31 December 2005]
UK government pushes
ahead with privatisation of healthcare
[8 February 2005]
Britain: rise in superbug
cases linked to decrease in hospital cleaning staff
[22 January 2005]
Britain: National Health
Service faces mounting cash crisis
[29 September 2003]
British Labours
modernisation programme: transferring public assets
to private capital
[20 July 1999]
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