Election candidates are being asked by the campaign group Keep Our NHS Public (KONP) for
their views on what is happening to the NHS. Naturally, as socialists we see
nothing wrong with the idea that health care should be provided out of the
resources available to society as a whole and that people should have free
access to health care and medicines as and when they need them. It's what will
happen in a socialist society.
Attempts to achieve this within capitalism run up against
all sorts of problems, as the history and current state of the NHS show.
The basic problem arises from the fact that, as far as the
minority who own society's resources are concerned, there is no such thing as a
free service. Anything provided free has to be paid for out of taxation and in
the end taxes fall on their property and their profits.
So, the free service gets undermined at both ends. The funds
to finance it are cheese-pared and charges are introduced. Some services remain
free at the point of use but come to be provided by profit-seeking enterprises.
Given capitalism, the service cannot be run democratically but has to be
administered by a bureaucracy whose remit is to save money by cutting costs,
including the cost of paying the wages and salaries of those who work for the
service.
It's a never-ending battle by trade unions and pressure
groups to try to stop this happening. A defensive and often losing struggle
just to stop things getting worse.
A free health service in the midst of an economy based on
production for profit will always be insecure. The NHS was introduced in the
first place because it suited the minority owning class to have a relatively
healthy and productive workforce that, when sick, could be quickly treated and
got back to work as soon as possible. Now that more and more of those needing
health care are retired the owning class are less interested in paying for the
NHS and it shows.
The only way to secure a lasting free health service is as
part of a socialist society where there will no longer be class ownership of
society's resources or production for profit. Then, all services and not just
health care will be both free and democratically administered. Where will the
money to pay for this come from, the clever dick interviewer will ask? Nowhere,
as there won't be any money, just resources and these exist in sufficient
quantity especially after the artificial scarcity and organised waste of
capitalist society have been removed.
The Ten Candidates
Jacqueline Shodeke - Brighton Kemptown;
Howard Pilott - Brighton Pavilion;
Robert Cox – Canterbury;
Steve Colborn – Easington;
Andy Thomas - Folkestone and Hythe;
Bill Martin - Islington North;
Kevin Parkin - Oxford East;
Mike Foster - Oxford West and Abingdon
Brian Johnson - Swansea West;
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