Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
Reinhardt wrote:UK has had a massive productivity issue for many years. Nobody is quite sure what the answer to it is.
In regards to the strikes, it's entirely public sector workers (exception of train companies). The reason for that? 10 odd years of no pay rises, and continious lack of investment and not providing enough staffing resources to deal with it.
Police - 20,000 officers, hundreds of police stations were shut over the last 10 years. Now the govt want to get back 20,000 and want us all to be happy about it. In that period, crime has gone up massively and those police left feel completely let down and lost.
Court system - lawyers striked because (yes you've guessed it) a decade of no pay rises and not enough of them (working for the state). Newly qualified were paid penuts and expected to live in London, they almost lost money doing it. Result - huge backlog in the court system.
NHS - Health workers - decade of being under paid, no made even worse by inflation / cost of living. Decade of lack of money (i.e not kept up with what it needed). Poor management. Hundreds of thousands of staff retired early during covid, or left because of Brexit (i.e were foreign nationals and quit due to the way they were treated). Funding hasn't kept up and services have crumbled. Add Covid and a bad flu season into the mix and it's on it's knees When ambulances are queued up in the road, not able to offload patients, people are dieing in corridors, people cannot get an ambulance in under 4 hours.... something is seriously wrong. Can't get enough staff, won't be able to train enough fast enough.
Border force - nowhere near enough of them. Takes ages to get through UK customs, has done since before Brexit but it's only been made worse.
Civil servants - abused (verbally) on a weekly basis by this government. Undervalued, cut to the bone. Government want even more cuts.
Teachers - every new government wants to completely transform education, yet they screw it up. Teachers under paid, over staffed, constantly being told what they are teaching is wrong and it's changed.
Railways - Most persons striking aren't train drivers - that's a different union. It's mainly the low paid station staff, cleaners, maintainence staff. Appalingly paid, expected to work silly hours. Train drivers don't want driverless trains (I agree) and don't want ticket inspectors removed from what few trains they are left on - far better to always have a person on a train other than just the driver, especially in inner cities. Yes train drivers get paid fairly and actually very well, but their concerns are entirely valid.
Basically short story- 12 years of sheer incompetance from government. Nowhere near enough investment (money was available, it's just all been splashed up the wall by vanity projects, Brexit, corruption).
GDB wrote:And for this? Poorer by the year, nurses, teachers, even some firefighters, having to use that stain on our nation, food banks, something that hardly existed before 2010 but whose rapid rise is something Jacob Rees Mogg is proud of, he says.
Schools crumbling many seen as dangerous.
Then there is the stark comparison between the rise in energy bills here, compared to 25 miles across the channel.
And it seems that public support is strong, not just for the nurses either.
Certainly holding up despite the ideological approach of the government, already they have had to admit that they have spent more money prolonging the rail dispute than if they had settled it last year.
Speaking of which, the CEO’s of the train operations give themselves fat bonuses however badly they perform, some are in chaos well clear of any strikes.
Plus they want to cut maintenance and engineering by 50%
Now imagine that being allowed in aviation, both carry lots of people at speed after all.
Aaron747 wrote:GDB wrote:And for this? Poorer by the year, nurses, teachers, even some firefighters, having to use that stain on our nation, food banks, something that hardly existed before 2010 but whose rapid rise is something Jacob Rees Mogg is proud of, he says.
Schools crumbling many seen as dangerous.
Then there is the stark comparison between the rise in energy bills here, compared to 25 miles across the channel.
And it seems that public support is strong, not just for the nurses either.
Certainly holding up despite the ideological approach of the government, already they have had to admit that they have spent more money prolonging the rail dispute than if they had settled it last year.
Speaking of which, the CEO’s of the train operations give themselves fat bonuses however badly they perform, some are in chaos well clear of any strikes.
Plus they want to cut maintenance and engineering by 50%
Now imagine that being allowed in aviation, both carry lots of people at speed after all.
Cutting maintenance and engineering by 50%?? Hello worse delays and derailments...
Reinhardt wrote:Border force - nowhere near enough of them. Takes ages to get through UK customs, has done since before Brexit but it's only been made worse.
).
GDB wrote:Reinhardt wrote:UK has had a massive productivity issue for many years. Nobody is quite sure what the answer to it is.
In regards to the strikes, it's entirely public sector workers (exception of train companies). The reason for that? 10 odd years of no pay rises, and continious lack of investment and not providing enough staffing resources to deal with it.
Police - 20,000 officers, hundreds of police stations were shut over the last 10 years. Now the govt want to get back 20,000 and want us all to be happy about it. In that period, crime has gone up massively and those police left feel completely let down and lost.
Court system - lawyers striked because (yes you've guessed it) a decade of no pay rises and not enough of them (working for the state). Newly qualified were paid penuts and expected to live in London, they almost lost money doing it. Result - huge backlog in the court system.
NHS - Health workers - decade of being under paid, no made even worse by inflation / cost of living. Decade of lack of money (i.e not kept up with what it needed). Poor management. Hundreds of thousands of staff retired early during covid, or left because of Brexit (i.e were foreign nationals and quit due to the way they were treated). Funding hasn't kept up and services have crumbled. Add Covid and a bad flu season into the mix and it's on it's knees When ambulances are queued up in the road, not able to offload patients, people are dieing in corridors, people cannot get an ambulance in under 4 hours.... something is seriously wrong. Can't get enough staff, won't be able to train enough fast enough.
Border force - nowhere near enough of them. Takes ages to get through UK customs, has done since before Brexit but it's only been made worse.
Civil servants - abused (verbally) on a weekly basis by this government. Undervalued, cut to the bone. Government want even more cuts.
Teachers - every new government wants to completely transform education, yet they screw it up. Teachers under paid, over staffed, constantly being told what they are teaching is wrong and it's changed.
Railways - Most persons striking aren't train drivers - that's a different union. It's mainly the low paid station staff, cleaners, maintainence staff. Appalingly paid, expected to work silly hours. Train drivers don't want driverless trains (I agree) and don't want ticket inspectors removed from what few trains they are left on - far better to always have a person on a train other than just the driver, especially in inner cities. Yes train drivers get paid fairly and actually very well, but their concerns are entirely valid.
Basically short story- 12 years of sheer incompetance from government. Nowhere near enough investment (money was available, it's just all been splashed up the wall by vanity projects, Brexit, corruption).
Well summed up. I would add that during the Pandemic most striking were lauded as key workers and even at times, due to greater risk of infection (a toll of transport workers, health professionals, care workers), as heroes.
All the while, you know who and his grubby, corrupt cohorts partied. The Head of State kept to the rules and demonstrated it even when, like so many others, in grieving, the government of liars, corrupt and just incompetent had a piss up and gave ungodly amounts of our money to their pals for useless PPE while established companies desperate to help and with previous experience, were ignored. Not being Tory donors then.
And for this? Poorer by the year, nurses, teachers, even some firefighters, having to use that stain on our nation, food banks, something that hardly existed before 2010 but whose rapid rise is something Jacob Rees Mogg is proud of, he says.
Schools crumbling many seen as dangerous.
Then there is the stark comparison between the rise in energy bills here, compared to 25 miles across the channel.
And it seems that public support is strong, not just for the nurses either.
Certainly holding up despite the ideological approach of the government, already they have had to admit that they have spent more money prolonging the rail dispute than if they had settled it last year.
Speaking of which, the CEO’s of the train operations give themselves fat bonuses however badly they perform, some are in chaos well clear of any strikes.
Plus they want to cut maintenance and engineering by 50%
Now imagine that being allowed in aviation, both carry lots of people at speed after all.
chimborazo wrote:So you’ve had a good moan about it, now how are you going to pay for salary increases? Are you personally going to contribute more? (...).
sabenapilot wrote:chimborazo wrote:So you’ve had a good moan about it, now how are you going to pay for salary increases? Are you personally going to contribute more? (...).
For a start, not all too many people (like 99%) would have to contribute more in taxes; Britain needs to expand its taxable basis by growing its GDP rather than delibarately shrinking it through idiocentric policy choices which it has been rolling out the last 15 years or so and which have culminated for the past couple of years now.
Get the 1% to pay their fair share and start by investing that in infrastructure, in public education, in housing and other stuff so the UK finally can get a more productive workforce, on a par with that of the rest of Western Europe maybe?
Oh, and maybe stop pretending to be something unique as just a medium-sized island nation just a few miles of the coast of the largest economic single market in the world and try to be able to export to that market without any of the recently added costs associated with it, so that whatever gets produced more effeciently in the UK in future doesnt get handicapped at the boarder crossings once more...
In short - do as the Germans did after it was razed in WWII: make yourself attractive to foreign investors and fit for international competition PLUS create yourself the largest export market you can think of by belonging to something bigger than just the islands that form the UK: it's all domestic policy you know?
Ultimately it all comes down to the simple existential question each has to answer for itself in the UK, much more than all the empty flagwaving the Brits are so good at: how much do you want to give up for your own country to thrive and how much does it bother you to actually see your kids grow up in one of the poorest nations in the Western world soon?
chimborazo wrote:GDB wrote:Reinhardt wrote:UK has had a massive productivity issue for many years. Nobody is quite sure what the answer to it is.
In regards to the strikes, it's entirely public sector workers (exception of train companies). The reason for that? 10 odd years of no pay rises, and continious lack of investment and not providing enough staffing resources to deal with it.
Police - 20,000 officers, hundreds of police stations were shut over the last 10 years. Now the govt want to get back 20,000 and want us all to be happy about it. In that period, crime has gone up massively and those police left feel completely let down and lost.
Court system - lawyers striked because (yes you've guessed it) a decade of no pay rises and not enough of them (working for the state). Newly qualified were paid penuts and expected to live in London, they almost lost money doing it. Result - huge backlog in the court system.
NHS - Health workers - decade of being under paid, no made even worse by inflation / cost of living. Decade of lack of money (i.e not kept up with what it needed). Poor management. Hundreds of thousands of staff retired early during covid, or left because of Brexit (i.e were foreign nationals and quit due to the way they were treated). Funding hasn't kept up and services have crumbled. Add Covid and a bad flu season into the mix and it's on it's knees When ambulances are queued up in the road, not able to offload patients, people are dieing in corridors, people cannot get an ambulance in under 4 hours.... something is seriously wrong. Can't get enough staff, won't be able to train enough fast enough.
Border force - nowhere near enough of them. Takes ages to get through UK customs, has done since before Brexit but it's only been made worse.
Civil servants - abused (verbally) on a weekly basis by this government. Undervalued, cut to the bone. Government want even more cuts.
Teachers - every new government wants to completely transform education, yet they screw it up. Teachers under paid, over staffed, constantly being told what they are teaching is wrong and it's changed.
Railways - Most persons striking aren't train drivers - that's a different union. It's mainly the low paid station staff, cleaners, maintainence staff. Appalingly paid, expected to work silly hours. Train drivers don't want driverless trains (I agree) and don't want ticket inspectors removed from what few trains they are left on - far better to always have a person on a train other than just the driver, especially in inner cities. Yes train drivers get paid fairly and actually very well, but their concerns are entirely valid.
Basically short story- 12 years of sheer incompetance from government. Nowhere near enough investment (money was available, it's just all been splashed up the wall by vanity projects, Brexit, corruption).
Well summed up. I would add that during the Pandemic most striking were lauded as key workers and even at times, due to greater risk of infection (a toll of transport workers, health professionals, care workers), as heroes.
All the while, you know who and his grubby, corrupt cohorts partied. The Head of State kept to the rules and demonstrated it even when, like so many others, in grieving, the government of liars, corrupt and just incompetent had a piss up and gave ungodly amounts of our money to their pals for useless PPE while established companies desperate to help and with previous experience, were ignored. Not being Tory donors then.
And for this? Poorer by the year, nurses, teachers, even some firefighters, having to use that stain on our nation, food banks, something that hardly existed before 2010 but whose rapid rise is something Jacob Rees Mogg is proud of, he says.
Schools crumbling many seen as dangerous.
Then there is the stark comparison between the rise in energy bills here, compared to 25 miles across the channel.
And it seems that public support is strong, not just for the nurses either.
Certainly holding up despite the ideological approach of the government, already they have had to admit that they have spent more money prolonging the rail dispute than if they had settled it last year.
Speaking of which, the CEO’s of the train operations give themselves fat bonuses however badly they perform, some are in chaos well clear of any strikes.
Plus they want to cut maintenance and engineering by 50%
Now imagine that being allowed in aviation, both carry lots of people at speed after all.
So you’ve had a good moan about it, now how are you going to pay for salary increases? Are you personally going to contribute more? I work in the private sector (which of course funds the public sector). I haven’t had a pay rise, I’ve also got poorer over the last few years. So why should NHS workers get a pay rise when I don’t? I kept working and bringing millions of pounds from abroad into our economy during the pandemic. NHS workers aren’t heroes: they were doing their job. And the idea that truck drivers etc were somehow heroes for also doing their jobs as “key workers” is laughable. P
For context my mother has just had her shoulder replacement (due to severe arthritis) cancelled for the FOURTH time because of all this. She has to have that done before she can have her hips replaced - there is nothing left of the top of her femurs.
It’s often said the NHS is underfunded… it’s not… a huge amount of money goes to middle management and contractors.
Reinhardt wrote:NHS - Health workers - decade of being under paid, no made even worse by inflation / cost of living. Decade of lack of money (i.e not kept up with what it needed). Poor management. Hundreds of thousands of staff retired early during covid, or left because of Brexit (i.e were foreign nationals and quit due to the way they were treated). Funding hasn't kept up and services have crumbled. Add Covid and a bad flu season into the mix and it's on it's knees When ambulances are queued up in the road, not able to offload patients, people are dieing in corridors, people cannot get an ambulance in under 4 hours.... something is seriously wrong. Can't get enough staff, won't be able to train enough fast enough..
GDB wrote:To further the point about spending, how much as a portion of GDP does the UK spend on health compared say the EU average?
We know we spend less than them, we also know the US spends way more for worse outcomes.
So yes there is being efficient but for all it’s faults and interfering, it’s still way more efficient than that model across the pond.
Run by companies which the PM and some of his cabinet have been talking to.
Then we can compare the average waiting time in 2010, to 2019 (so before the pandemic even).
What a difference.
Made worse by a dispute when Hunt was Health Secretary, resulting in many young doctors leaving in the mid 2010's, many to work in places like Australia.
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/nh ... -capacity/
astuteman wrote:GDB wrote:To further the point about spending, how much as a portion of GDP does the UK spend on health compared say the EU average?
We know we spend less than them, we also know the US spends way more for worse outcomes.
So yes there is being efficient but for all it’s faults and interfering, it’s still way more efficient than that model across the pond.
Run by companies which the PM and some of his cabinet have been talking to.
Then we can compare the average waiting time in 2010, to 2019 (so before the pandemic even).
What a difference.
Made worse by a dispute when Hunt was Health Secretary, resulting in many young doctors leaving in the mid 2010's, many to work in places like Australia.
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/nh ... -capacity/
Seeing as how you asked the question, the answers can easily be found ....
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... per_capita
Ok, its Wiki, but it has some really interesting stats in it.
"We know we spend less than them" actually results in us being somehwere in the middle of European Countries on a PPP basis.
As for the USA, I'm not remotely interested in "Whataboutism" - especially with the USA as a benchmark
I could just as well point to Portugal, Spain or Italy, who spend dramatically less than us on health care per Capita, but achieve a better outcome.
It in no way excuses the profligate waste of taxpayers money due to inefficiency - however much is spent.
The Wiki page has a chart embedded in it that is really interesting
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... ending.jpg
To pick a few data points....
USA - $10,000 per capita, life expectancy 78.6 years.
Germany - $5,700 per capita, life expectancy 81 years.
UK - $4,000 per capita, life expectancy 81.3 years.
Italy - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
Spain - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
If anything the data tends to support the reality that the more spending goes up, the worse the outcome.
I don't know any other industry that would just throw heaps of money at a delivery system before it had it fixed.
Maybe I think like this because I've been a Manufacturing Engineer most of my working life, I don't know.
My genuine worry is that if we only focus on "more money" we will be missing the point, and will miss the outcome.
Which makes me a lot less interested in political points scoring.
Rgds
Bongodog1964 wrote:Public sector workers all benefit from index linked 100% inflation proof pensions, they also enjoy considerably more holiday and sickness entitlement than private sector workers, yet expect exactly the same or higher pay rates. They had the additional benefit that every single one of them received 100% pay during the covid shut down when many people wwerer laid off on 80% at best.
It is not correct that they have received zero pay rises in recent years, in the early 2010's it is true that this was the case,for the headline rate, but they still qualified for automatic annual increments due to length of service, additional skills etc, anyone who has ever had to implement the local government spinal code will know how this works.
GDB wrote:Bongodog1964 wrote:Public sector workers all benefit from index linked 100% inflation proof pensions, they also enjoy considerably more holiday and sickness entitlement than private sector workers, yet expect exactly the same or higher pay rates. They had the additional benefit that every single one of them received 100% pay during the covid shut down when many people wwerer laid off on 80% at best.
It is not correct that they have received zero pay rises in recent years, in the early 2010's it is true that this was the case,for the headline rate, but they still qualified for automatic annual increments due to length of service, additional skills etc, anyone who has ever had to implement the local government spinal code will know how this works.
Knowing some who work in the public sector, including civil service, they might have a view on the idea that their pensions were untouched!
As someone who spend months on furlough in the first months of the pandemic, in a private company, I can say policies on that seemed to differ, there was the furlough scheme of course.
Still, if life is so rosy for them, why are so many striking, (losing money while), mostly for the first time ever?
pune wrote:Apart from that, big business doesn't pay as much tax as everybody else does. One big reason for the industrial action to happen -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-QZ-M6kNLXM
pune wrote:GDB wrote:Bongodog1964 wrote:Public sector workers all benefit from index linked 100% inflation proof pensions, they also enjoy considerably more holiday and sickness entitlement than private sector workers, yet expect exactly the same or higher pay rates. They had the additional benefit that every single one of them received 100% pay during the covid shut down when many people wwerer laid off on 80% at best.
It is not correct that they have received zero pay rises in recent years, in the early 2010's it is true that this was the case,for the headline rate, but they still qualified for automatic annual increments due to length of service, additional skills etc, anyone who has ever had to implement the local government spinal code will know how this works.
Knowing some who work in the public sector, including civil service, they might have a view on the idea that their pensions were untouched!
As someone who spend months on furlough in the first months of the pandemic, in a private company, I can say policies on that seemed to differ, there was the furlough scheme of course.
Still, if life is so rosy for them, why are so many striking, (losing money while), mostly for the first time ever?
I think it has to do with less worker rights and also situations. For e.g. if I was a train driver, I would like to have train security in case something happens. They want in some places driverless trains, and in some places driver-only trains. If I were a driver, I would be concerned. Should I be concentrating on just driving the train or look over my shoulder if something is gonna amiss, including terrorism (a fact of life). In India, we have RPF (Railway Protection Force)
https://rpf.indianrailways.gov.in/RPF/
This institution is basically for protecting Railway employees, Railway infrastructure and paid passengers. It doesn't mean crime doesn't happen, but criminals are apprehended and they are usually a handful in any given train.
While I have shared for trains, similar situations I guess everywhere. If you make the employees insecure, no wonder sooner or later they are going to strike.
I am aware that UK is legislating anti-strike legislation. How much they would be able to enforce is probably another thing altogether.
chimborazo wrote:It’s often said the NHS is underfunded… it’s not… a huge amount of money goes to middle management and contractors.
Aesma wrote:chimborazo wrote:It’s often said the NHS is underfunded… it’s not… a huge amount of money goes to middle management and contractors.
The NHS is both similar to the French system, and totally different. Similar in that it's funded by taxes including payroll taxes, and mostly free at the point of use, and different in most everything else.
From my understanding that sentence I quoted is one cause of the issue. "NHS" is understood as being something public, indeed the government is fighting against nurses that are public servants. Yet a large amount of "NHS funding" doesn't go to the public NHS, but to private companies. And the UK public is blissfully unaware of this.
Kiwirob wrote:Reinhardt wrote:Border force - nowhere near enough of them. Takes ages to get through UK customs, has done since before Brexit but it's only been made worse.
).
I somewhat disagree with this, depending on which airport you enter, if you're a UK citizen or one of the lucky few with the right nationality you can use the electronic gates which makes crossing the border a breeze.
astuteman wrote:and loads of extra funding is certainly not it.
astuteman wrote:But health care in the UK is outstandingly inefficient.
astuteman wrote:This is currently compounded by
a) low paid contingent staff leaving due to Brexit
b) Highly paid, experienced personnel riding the "early retirement" wave, now that they've discovered what being at home is like, and that their long-standing defined benefit pensions will easily fund it.
astuteman wrote:That's before we get started on decades of stupid spending, such as £300m new hospital wings built, but no funding for staff to run it, so its opened and immediately mothballed (thanks to Mum-in-Law for that one).
astuteman wrote:Astonishingly large amounts of money. But back to your point Rheinhardt, how do make it be enough, and how would we know?
pune wrote:@Reinhardt, in the first post, didn't you say you don't know why UK has productivity issue. AFAIK Margaret Thatcher threw a lot of manufacturing when she ruled in the 70's for whatever reason/s she stated. Now if you are going to throw our manufacturing then for sure you are becoming dependent on others. And am sure you know it takes a lot to build even the most simplest of objects. for e.g. the diminutive and innocent microwave oven which is part and parcel of today's age, or the humble radio. I could go on and on, these are things which used to be known for their British origin but now not so much. I am sure most old-timers would recall murphy radios as an e.g.
http://www.murphy-radio.co.uk/
GDB wrote:astuteman wrote:GDB wrote:To further the point about spending, how much as a portion of GDP does the UK spend on health compared say the EU average?
We know we spend less than them, we also know the US spends way more for worse outcomes.
So yes there is being efficient but for all it’s faults and interfering, it’s still way more efficient than that model across the pond.
Run by companies which the PM and some of his cabinet have been talking to.
Then we can compare the average waiting time in 2010, to 2019 (so before the pandemic even).
What a difference.
Made worse by a dispute when Hunt was Health Secretary, resulting in many young doctors leaving in the mid 2010's, many to work in places like Australia.
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/nh ... -capacity/
Seeing as how you asked the question, the answers can easily be found ....
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... per_capita
Ok, its Wiki, but it has some really interesting stats in it.
"We know we spend less than them" actually results in us being somehwere in the middle of European Countries on a PPP basis.
As for the USA, I'm not remotely interested in "Whataboutism" - especially with the USA as a benchmark
I could just as well point to Portugal, Spain or Italy, who spend dramatically less than us on health care per Capita, but achieve a better outcome.
It in no way excuses the profligate waste of taxpayers money due to inefficiency - however much is spent.
The Wiki page has a chart embedded in it that is really interesting
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... ending.jpg
To pick a few data points....
USA - $10,000 per capita, life expectancy 78.6 years.
Germany - $5,700 per capita, life expectancy 81 years.
UK - $4,000 per capita, life expectancy 81.3 years.
Italy - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
Spain - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
If anything the data tends to support the reality that the more spending goes up, the worse the outcome.
I don't know any other industry that would just throw heaps of money at a delivery system before it had it fixed.
Maybe I think like this because I've been a Manufacturing Engineer most of my working life, I don't know.
My genuine worry is that if we only focus on "more money" we will be missing the point, and will miss the outcome.
Which makes me a lot less interested in political points scoring.
Rgds
I don’t think we can, or should, compare a health system, as the various kinds in Europe at least work, to a business, manufacturing or otherwise.
Note the link on my previous post to this, comparing us to EU nations in the last decade. I would suggest as a result of political choice.
Two of the examples are certainly interesting, recall how Italy, seen as having one of the best systems in the world, which came under the unexpected attack from the pandemic. We even had a few weeks warning.
But is there more to it, we hear a lot about ‘the Mediterranean Diet’, are there lifestyle and other factors in their societies that affect average lifespan?
There is a consensus that more preventive action is better, for the users, yet even moderate attempts to say do a sugar tax, to limit fast food outlets near schools, are watered down if not scrapped.
Yet we know we have had success with this for things like smoking and some with alcohol, younger people are drinking less in general.
Away from Europe, Japan has a longer lifespan average than most, diet is cited, though there will be other factors unique to their society.
I worry that there is a ‘cost of everything, value of nothing’ issue here. A healthier workforce is more productive, a population in general less of a strain on other services.
Which leads back to Rheinharts point about UK productivity, (aside from the long term lack of investment compared to peer nations).
For my part, when diagnosed in 2000, I got rapid treatment and have to take a bunch of medications to control it, luckily no prescription charges as it’s a lifetime, acute condition.
Is that a burden on the taxpayer? No, it allowed me, within weeks, to return to my job full time, therefore paying my tax and N.I. so contributing to the service. I call that a virtuous circle.
I hate to think what it would be like if I was diagnosed now.
Worked full time until 2016 when I could afford to go to a three day week, still contributing though. Happy to. This lasted until 2020 when Walsh used the Pandemic and a refusal of government support, to settle his beef with the party of IAG that most turned a profit in normal times.
So after 37 years, I was out.
Luckily when I joined there was still such a thing called decent company pensions, though over the years they did try, with cash bribes, to encourage us to switch to newer (worse) schemes, for some that money could have been needed and their other circumstances suited it, not me though.
Again, I shudder at what it’s like for young people now entering the workplace, poor pensions, all those ‘zero hours contracts’, small wonder, unlike our generation, getting into the housing market, even leaving home, is very different.
They are not ‘snowflakes’ as the client media have it, just victims of political choices.
Having said that, what damage did that Truss do to it? Millions of pensions affected by her mad ideas. No contrition though.
We can blame the health system, who runs it, who has been for over a dozen years?
Politicians, Health Secretaries like that wretched Matt Hancock, or a recent if short lived one, that Coffey woman, all corpulence, booze and cigars, who as the crisis worsened, was most vexed by the use of a certain kind of punctuation within the system.
Or you can think what ‘30p Lee Anderson’ (so named as he, on 80,000 a year plus, thinks 30p is enough to live on per day, plus its the Nurses fault for not budgeting).
Not sure if he was the Tory MP who accused the Royal College of Nursing (on strike for the first time ever) of effectively working for Putin.
Yes, they are as awful as that.
Not that it’s working if polling is remotely accurate.
c933103 wrote:I feel like it's a problem of entire developed world.
The world in the past 30 years have been growing richer, but its main benefit go to people in developing countries earning more and getting life closer to people in developed countries, as well as multinational companies who employ such labor. As a result situation in developed countries remain generally stagnate in the past 30 years and life for younger generation become harder than older generation.
There are no one who "run" it caused the situation, but that there are cheaper labor around the world available that made this the reality. And this is a good thing because it helped billions around the world. However there's no mechanism to mitigate the relative reduction in living standard in developed countries. I cannot think of any realistic way to truly solve this problem.
pune wrote:@Reinhardt, in the first post, didn't you say you don't know why UK has productivity issue. AFAIK Margaret Thatcher threw a lot of manufacturing when she ruled in the 70's for whatever reason/s she stated. Now if you are going to throw our manufacturing then for sure you are becoming dependent on others. And am sure you know it takes a lot to build even the most simplest of objects. for e.g. the diminutive and innocent microwave oven which is part and parcel of today's age, or the humble radio. I could go on and on, these are things which used to be known for their British origin but now not so much. I am sure most old-timers would recall murphy radios as an e.g.
http://www.murphy-radio.co.uk/
pune wrote:c933103 wrote:I feel like it's a problem of entire developed world.
The world in the past 30 years have been growing richer, but its main benefit go to people in developing countries earning more and getting life closer to people in developed countries, as well as multinational companies who employ such labor. As a result situation in developed countries remain generally stagnate in the past 30 years and life for younger generation become harder than older generation.
There are no one who "run" it caused the situation, but that there are cheaper labor around the world available that made this the reality. And this is a good thing because it helped billions around the world. However there's no mechanism to mitigate the relative reduction in living standard in developed countries. I cannot think of any realistic way to truly solve this problem.
Think that's a very simplistic take and possibly that is what the media feeds, but if you look at the developing countries you would find they are still far far behind. For e.g. what do you think about Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, Qatar what would you say they are, developing or developed economies. Keeping in mind that they are similar or maybe tad smaller than UK. I would suggest that for bigger countries, denser populations etc. it is harder to get growth than the more smaller nimble countries, more so if they are democracies. There are solutions but they would need, for e.g. Proportional Representation could change lot of things. Also recall system. That would make political leaders more answerable to people. You need both. Unless that happens, don't see the laziness or unaccountability stopping anytime soon. And this is not just for UK, even countries like India too.
c933103 wrote:pune wrote:c933103 wrote:I feel like it's a problem of entire developed world.
The world in the past 30 years have been growing richer, but its main benefit go to people in developing countries earning more and getting life closer to people in developed countries, as well as multinational companies who employ such labor. As a result situation in developed countries remain generally stagnate in the past 30 years and life for younger generation become harder than older generation.
There are no one who "run" it caused the situation, but that there are cheaper labor around the world available that made this the reality. And this is a good thing because it helped billions around the world. However there's no mechanism to mitigate the relative reduction in living standard in developed countries. I cannot think of any realistic way to truly solve this problem.
Think that's a very simplistic take and possibly that is what the media feeds, but if you look at the developing countries you would find they are still far far behind. For e.g. what do you think about Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, Qatar what would you say they are, developing or developed economies. Keeping in mind that they are similar or maybe tad smaller than UK. I would suggest that for bigger countries, denser populations etc. it is harder to get growth than the more smaller nimble countries, more so if they are democracies. There are solutions but they would need, for e.g. Proportional Representation could change lot of things. Also recall system. That would make political leaders more answerable to people. You need both. Unless that happens, don't see the laziness or unaccountability stopping anytime soon. And this is not just for UK, even countries like India too.
There are little bearing on whether they are democracy or whether they are using which exact election system. And country size also does not matter. The key matter is trade is open. That developing countries are still pretty far from developed countries just mean there are still more room for such process to continue.
GDB wrote:astuteman wrote:GDB wrote:To further the point about spending, how much as a portion of GDP does the UK spend on health compared say the EU average?
We know we spend less than them, we also know the US spends way more for worse outcomes.
So yes there is being efficient but for all it’s faults and interfering, it’s still way more efficient than that model across the pond.
Run by companies which the PM and some of his cabinet have been talking to.
Then we can compare the average waiting time in 2010, to 2019 (so before the pandemic even).
What a difference.
Made worse by a dispute when Hunt was Health Secretary, resulting in many young doctors leaving in the mid 2010's, many to work in places like Australia.
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/nh ... -capacity/
Seeing as how you asked the question, the answers can easily be found ....
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... per_capita
Ok, its Wiki, but it has some really interesting stats in it.
"We know we spend less than them" actually results in us being somehwere in the middle of European Countries on a PPP basis.
As for the USA, I'm not remotely interested in "Whataboutism" - especially with the USA as a benchmark
I could just as well point to Portugal, Spain or Italy, who spend dramatically less than us on health care per Capita, but achieve a better outcome.
It in no way excuses the profligate waste of taxpayers money due to inefficiency - however much is spent.
The Wiki page has a chart embedded in it that is really interesting
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... ending.jpg
To pick a few data points....
USA - $10,000 per capita, life expectancy 78.6 years.
Germany - $5,700 per capita, life expectancy 81 years.
UK - $4,000 per capita, life expectancy 81.3 years.
Italy - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
Spain - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
If anything the data tends to support the reality that the more spending goes up, the worse the outcome.
I don't know any other industry that would just throw heaps of money at a delivery system before it had it fixed.
Maybe I think like this because I've been a Manufacturing Engineer most of my working life, I don't know.
My genuine worry is that if we only focus on "more money" we will be missing the point, and will miss the outcome.
Which makes me a lot less interested in political points scoring.
Rgds
I don’t think we can, or should, compare a health system, as the various kinds in Europe at least work, to a business, manufacturing or otherwise.
Note the link on my previous post to this, comparing us to EU nations in the last decade. I would suggest as a result of political choice.
Two of the examples are certainly interesting, recall how Italy, seen as having one of the best systems in the world, which came under the unexpected attack from the pandemic. We even had a few weeks warning.
But is there more to it, we hear a lot about ‘the Mediterranean Diet’, are there lifestyle and other factors in their societies that affect average lifespan?
There is a consensus that more preventive action is better, for the users, yet even moderate attempts to say do a sugar tax, to limit fast food outlets near schools, are watered down if not scrapped.
Yet we know we have had success with this for things like smoking and some with alcohol, younger people are drinking less in general.
Away from Europe, Japan has a longer lifespan average than most, diet is cited, though there will be other factors unique to their society.
I worry that there is a ‘cost of everything, value of nothing’ issue here. A healthier workforce is more productive, a population in general less of a strain on other services.
Which leads back to Rheinharts point about UK productivity, (aside from the long term lack of investment compared to peer nations).
For my part, when diagnosed in 2000, I got rapid treatment and have to take a bunch of medications to control it, luckily no prescription charges as it’s a lifetime, acute condition.
Is that a burden on the taxpayer? No, it allowed me, within weeks, to return to my job full time, therefore paying my tax and N.I. so contributing to the service. I call that a virtuous circle.
I hate to think what it would be like if I was diagnosed now.
Worked full time until 2016 when I could afford to go to a three day week, still contributing though. Happy to. This lasted until 2020 when Walsh used the Pandemic and a refusal of government support, to settle his beef with the party of IAG that most turned a profit in normal times.
So after 37 years, I was out.
Luckily when I joined there was still such a thing called decent company pensions, though over the years they did try, with cash bribes, to encourage us to switch to newer (worse) schemes, for some that money could have been needed and their other circumstances suited it, not me though.
Again, I shudder at what it’s like for young people now entering the workplace, poor pensions, all those ‘zero hours contracts’, small wonder, unlike our generation, getting into the housing market, even leaving home, is very different.
They are not ‘snowflakes’ as the client media have it, just victims of political choices.
Having said that, what damage did that Truss do to it? Millions of pensions affected by her mad ideas. No contrition though.
We can blame the health system, who runs it, who has been for over a dozen years?
Politicians, Health Secretaries like that wretched Matt Hancock, or a recent if short lived one, that Coffey woman, all corpulence, booze and cigars, who as the crisis worsened, was most vexed by the use of a certain kind of punctuation within the system.
Or you can think what ‘30p Lee Anderson’ (so named as he, on 80,000 a year plus, thinks 30p is enough to live on per day, plus its the Nurses fault for not budgeting).
Not sure if he was the Tory MP who accused the Royal College of Nursing (on strike for the first time ever) of effectively working for Putin.
Yes, they are as awful as that.
Not that it’s working if polling is remotely accurate.
I worry that there is a ‘cost of everything, value of nothing’ issue here.
astuteman wrote:GDB wrote:astuteman wrote:
Seeing as how you asked the question, the answers can easily be found ....
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... per_capita
Ok, its Wiki, but it has some really interesting stats in it.
"We know we spend less than them" actually results in us being somehwere in the middle of European Countries on a PPP basis.
As for the USA, I'm not remotely interested in "Whataboutism" - especially with the USA as a benchmark
I could just as well point to Portugal, Spain or Italy, who spend dramatically less than us on health care per Capita, but achieve a better outcome.
It in no way excuses the profligate waste of taxpayers money due to inefficiency - however much is spent.
The Wiki page has a chart embedded in it that is really interesting
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... ending.jpg
To pick a few data points....
USA - $10,000 per capita, life expectancy 78.6 years.
Germany - $5,700 per capita, life expectancy 81 years.
UK - $4,000 per capita, life expectancy 81.3 years.
Italy - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
Spain - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
If anything the data tends to support the reality that the more spending goes up, the worse the outcome.
I don't know any other industry that would just throw heaps of money at a delivery system before it had it fixed.
Maybe I think like this because I've been a Manufacturing Engineer most of my working life, I don't know.
My genuine worry is that if we only focus on "more money" we will be missing the point, and will miss the outcome.
Which makes me a lot less interested in political points scoring.
Rgds
I don’t think we can, or should, compare a health system, as the various kinds in Europe at least work, to a business, manufacturing or otherwise.
Note the link on my previous post to this, comparing us to EU nations in the last decade. I would suggest as a result of political choice.
Two of the examples are certainly interesting, recall how Italy, seen as having one of the best systems in the world, which came under the unexpected attack from the pandemic. We even had a few weeks warning.
But is there more to it, we hear a lot about ‘the Mediterranean Diet’, are there lifestyle and other factors in their societies that affect average lifespan?
There is a consensus that more preventive action is better, for the users, yet even moderate attempts to say do a sugar tax, to limit fast food outlets near schools, are watered down if not scrapped.
Yet we know we have had success with this for things like smoking and some with alcohol, younger people are drinking less in general.
Away from Europe, Japan has a longer lifespan average than most, diet is cited, though there will be other factors unique to their society.
I worry that there is a ‘cost of everything, value of nothing’ issue here. A healthier workforce is more productive, a population in general less of a strain on other services.
Which leads back to Rheinharts point about UK productivity, (aside from the long term lack of investment compared to peer nations).
For my part, when diagnosed in 2000, I got rapid treatment and have to take a bunch of medications to control it, luckily no prescription charges as it’s a lifetime, acute condition.
Is that a burden on the taxpayer? No, it allowed me, within weeks, to return to my job full time, therefore paying my tax and N.I. so contributing to the service. I call that a virtuous circle.
I hate to think what it would be like if I was diagnosed now.
Worked full time until 2016 when I could afford to go to a three day week, still contributing though. Happy to. This lasted until 2020 when Walsh used the Pandemic and a refusal of government support, to settle his beef with the party of IAG that most turned a profit in normal times.
So after 37 years, I was out.
Luckily when I joined there was still such a thing called decent company pensions, though over the years they did try, with cash bribes, to encourage us to switch to newer (worse) schemes, for some that money could have been needed and their other circumstances suited it, not me though.
Again, I shudder at what it’s like for young people now entering the workplace, poor pensions, all those ‘zero hours contracts’, small wonder, unlike our generation, getting into the housing market, even leaving home, is very different.
They are not ‘snowflakes’ as the client media have it, just victims of political choices.
Having said that, what damage did that Truss do to it? Millions of pensions affected by her mad ideas. No contrition though.
We can blame the health system, who runs it, who has been for over a dozen years?
Politicians, Health Secretaries like that wretched Matt Hancock, or a recent if short lived one, that Coffey woman, all corpulence, booze and cigars, who as the crisis worsened, was most vexed by the use of a certain kind of punctuation within the system.
Or you can think what ‘30p Lee Anderson’ (so named as he, on 80,000 a year plus, thinks 30p is enough to live on per day, plus its the Nurses fault for not budgeting).
Not sure if he was the Tory MP who accused the Royal College of Nursing (on strike for the first time ever) of effectively working for Putin.
Yes, they are as awful as that.
Not that it’s working if polling is remotely accurate.
For what its worth I neither did, nor would, vote for the bunch of self-serving idiots "running" the country now, and wouldn't challenge your views on the current incumbents.
(on a personal note, like you did, I'm about to go onto a reduced 3 day working week, being an old(er) git and all)
I suspect the reference to Manufacturing Engineering went over your head. ME is ALL about the provision of VALUEI worry that there is a ‘cost of everything, value of nothing’ issue here.
That was the whole point of my post, and the reference to a "system" with inputs (resources, money), a process (the provision of care), and an output (healthier, or better cared for people). The VALUE is the care provided. Lots of ambulances waiting in queues doesn't create value. Theatre staff available but not working doesn't create value. A senior staff nurse chasing round the hospital looking for an oxygen bottle doesn't create value.
If you don't think the Health service is a system that fits that description, I'd be interested to know.
Paradoxically, we've just had what I consider to be one of the most left wing, tax raising, budgets of any government for the last 20 years.
I certainly agree that more money is part of a solution.
But the supply of money is, and will be strictly limited.
The very taxes that provide that money are going to stifle GDP growth for years to come, and the IMF has clearly stated.
Which will stifle further funding growth
Whatever money is provided HAS to be spent as wisely as possible to provide the best value possible. That is surely just a fact, and not worthy of debate?
I don't think anyone would resent the health workers receiving a pay rise that at least matches inflation.
But that in itself will create inflationary pressure going forward and be self-perpetuating.
Back to the '70's again.
Whether you like the manufacturing analogy or not, the ONLY way to ever provide inflation matching wages and yet kill inflation, has been to increase productivity - in this case the more effective provision of care. And in the long term, the upshot of that is that fewer workers will be employed.
Not that I like it, but you watch what happens when an "unaffordable" pay award is agreed.
Watch ....
And no. The Conservatives aren't the only party that have wasted money in running the health system - it's been going on for decades, including Labour Governments.
I've watched them do it.
Is this lot the worst?
I couldn't argue with that.
My point is that it doesn't matter who runs it going forward, they have to fix structural issues that prevent the health system performing, in order to make the best use of the limited resources that will be available.
Not even a debate IMO. Surely?
Rgds
astuteman wrote:GDB wrote:astuteman wrote:
Seeing as how you asked the question, the answers can easily be found ....
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... per_capita
Ok, its Wiki, but it has some really interesting stats in it.
"We know we spend less than them" actually results in us being somehwere in the middle of European Countries on a PPP basis.
As for the USA, I'm not remotely interested in "Whataboutism" - especially with the USA as a benchmark
I could just as well point to Portugal, Spain or Italy, who spend dramatically less than us on health care per Capita, but achieve a better outcome.
It in no way excuses the profligate waste of taxpayers money due to inefficiency - however much is spent.
The Wiki page has a chart embedded in it that is really interesting
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... ending.jpg
To pick a few data points....
USA - $10,000 per capita, life expectancy 78.6 years.
Germany - $5,700 per capita, life expectancy 81 years.
UK - $4,000 per capita, life expectancy 81.3 years.
Italy - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
Spain - $3,200 per capita, life expectancy 83.3 years.
If anything the data tends to support the reality that the more spending goes up, the worse the outcome.
I don't know any other industry that would just throw heaps of money at a delivery system before it had it fixed.
Maybe I think like this because I've been a Manufacturing Engineer most of my working life, I don't know.
My genuine worry is that if we only focus on "more money" we will be missing the point, and will miss the outcome.
Which makes me a lot less interested in political points scoring.
Rgds
I don’t think we can, or should, compare a health system, as the various kinds in Europe at least work, to a business, manufacturing or otherwise.
Note the link on my previous post to this, comparing us to EU nations in the last decade. I would suggest as a result of political choice.
Two of the examples are certainly interesting, recall how Italy, seen as having one of the best systems in the world, which came under the unexpected attack from the pandemic. We even had a few weeks warning.
But is there more to it, we hear a lot about ‘the Mediterranean Diet’, are there lifestyle and other factors in their societies that affect average lifespan?
There is a consensus that more preventive action is better, for the users, yet even moderate attempts to say do a sugar tax, to limit fast food outlets near schools, are watered down if not scrapped.
Yet we know we have had success with this for things like smoking and some with alcohol, younger people are drinking less in general.
Away from Europe, Japan has a longer lifespan average than most, diet is cited, though there will be other factors unique to their society.
I worry that there is a ‘cost of everything, value of nothing’ issue here. A healthier workforce is more productive, a population in general less of a strain on other services.
Which leads back to Rheinharts point about UK productivity, (aside from the long term lack of investment compared to peer nations).
For my part, when diagnosed in 2000, I got rapid treatment and have to take a bunch of medications to control it, luckily no prescription charges as it’s a lifetime, acute condition.
Is that a burden on the taxpayer? No, it allowed me, within weeks, to return to my job full time, therefore paying my tax and N.I. so contributing to the service. I call that a virtuous circle.
I hate to think what it would be like if I was diagnosed now.
Worked full time until 2016 when I could afford to go to a three day week, still contributing though. Happy to. This lasted until 2020 when Walsh used the Pandemic and a refusal of government support, to settle his beef with the party of IAG that most turned a profit in normal times.
So after 37 years, I was out.
Luckily when I joined there was still such a thing called decent company pensions, though over the years they did try, with cash bribes, to encourage us to switch to newer (worse) schemes, for some that money could have been needed and their other circumstances suited it, not me though.
Again, I shudder at what it’s like for young people now entering the workplace, poor pensions, all those ‘zero hours contracts’, small wonder, unlike our generation, getting into the housing market, even leaving home, is very different.
They are not ‘snowflakes’ as the client media have it, just victims of political choices.
Having said that, what damage did that Truss do to it? Millions of pensions affected by her mad ideas. No contrition though.
We can blame the health system, who runs it, who has been for over a dozen years?
Politicians, Health Secretaries like that wretched Matt Hancock, or a recent if short lived one, that Coffey woman, all corpulence, booze and cigars, who as the crisis worsened, was most vexed by the use of a certain kind of punctuation within the system.
Or you can think what ‘30p Lee Anderson’ (so named as he, on 80,000 a year plus, thinks 30p is enough to live on per day, plus its the Nurses fault for not budgeting).
Not sure if he was the Tory MP who accused the Royal College of Nursing (on strike for the first time ever) of effectively working for Putin.
Yes, they are as awful as that.
Not that it’s working if polling is remotely accurate.
For what its worth I neither did, nor would, vote for the bunch of self-serving idiots "running" the country now, and wouldn't challenge your views on the current incumbents.
(on a personal note, like you did, I'm about to go onto a reduced 3 day working week, being an old(er) git and all)
I suspect the reference to Manufacturing Engineering went over your head. ME is ALL about the provision of VALUEI worry that there is a ‘cost of everything, value of nothing’ issue here.
That was the whole point of my post, and the reference to a "system" with inputs (resources, money), a process (the provision of care), and an output (healthier, or better cared for people). The VALUE is the care provided. Lots of ambulances waiting in queues doesn't create value. Theatre staff available but not working doesn't create value. A senior staff nurse chasing round the hospital looking for an oxygen bottle doesn't create value.
If you don't think the Health service is a system that fits that description, I'd be interested to know.
Paradoxically, we've just had what I consider to be one of the most left wing, tax raising, budgets of any government for the last 20 years.
I certainly agree that more money is part of a solution.
But the supply of money is, and will be strictly limited.
The very taxes that provide that money are going to stifle GDP growth for years to come, and the IMF has clearly stated.
Which will stifle further funding growth
Whatever money is provided HAS to be spent as wisely as possible to provide the best value possible. That is surely just a fact, and not worthy of debate?
I don't think anyone would resent the health workers receiving a pay rise that at least matches inflation.
But that in itself will create inflationary pressure going forward and be self-perpetuating.
Back to the '70's again.
Whether you like the manufacturing analogy or not, the ONLY way to ever provide inflation matching wages and yet kill inflation, has been to increase productivity - in this case the more effective provision of care. And in the long term, the upshot of that is that fewer workers will be employed.
Not that I like it, but you watch what happens when an "unaffordable" pay award is agreed.
Watch ....
And no. The Conservatives aren't the only party that have wasted money in running the health system - it's been going on for decades, including Labour Governments.
I've watched them do it.
Is this lot the worst?
I couldn't argue with that.
My point is that it doesn't matter who runs it going forward, they have to fix structural issues that prevent the health system performing, in order to make the best use of the limited resources that will be available.
Not even a debate IMO. Surely?
Rgds
Chaostheory wrote:astuteman wrote:GDB wrote:
I don’t think we can, or should, compare a health system, as the various kinds in Europe at least work, to a business, manufacturing or otherwise.
Note the link on my previous post to this, comparing us to EU nations in the last decade. I would suggest as a result of political choice.
Two of the examples are certainly interesting, recall how Italy, seen as having one of the best systems in the world, which came under the unexpected attack from the pandemic. We even had a few weeks warning.
But is there more to it, we hear a lot about ‘the Mediterranean Diet’, are there lifestyle and other factors in their societies that affect average lifespan?
There is a consensus that more preventive action is better, for the users, yet even moderate attempts to say do a sugar tax, to limit fast food outlets near schools, are watered down if not scrapped.
Yet we know we have had success with this for things like smoking and some with alcohol, younger people are drinking less in general.
Away from Europe, Japan has a longer lifespan average than most, diet is cited, though there will be other factors unique to their society.
I worry that there is a ‘cost of everything, value of nothing’ issue here. A healthier workforce is more productive, a population in general less of a strain on other services.
Which leads back to Rheinharts point about UK productivity, (aside from the long term lack of investment compared to peer nations).
For my part, when diagnosed in 2000, I got rapid treatment and have to take a bunch of medications to control it, luckily no prescription charges as it’s a lifetime, acute condition.
Is that a burden on the taxpayer? No, it allowed me, within weeks, to return to my job full time, therefore paying my tax and N.I. so contributing to the service. I call that a virtuous circle.
I hate to think what it would be like if I was diagnosed now.
Worked full time until 2016 when I could afford to go to a three day week, still contributing though. Happy to. This lasted until 2020 when Walsh used the Pandemic and a refusal of government support, to settle his beef with the party of IAG that most turned a profit in normal times.
So after 37 years, I was out.
Luckily when I joined there was still such a thing called decent company pensions, though over the years they did try, with cash bribes, to encourage us to switch to newer (worse) schemes, for some that money could have been needed and their other circumstances suited it, not me though.
Again, I shudder at what it’s like for young people now entering the workplace, poor pensions, all those ‘zero hours contracts’, small wonder, unlike our generation, getting into the housing market, even leaving home, is very different.
They are not ‘snowflakes’ as the client media have it, just victims of political choices.
Having said that, what damage did that Truss do to it? Millions of pensions affected by her mad ideas. No contrition though.
We can blame the health system, who runs it, who has been for over a dozen years?
Politicians, Health Secretaries like that wretched Matt Hancock, or a recent if short lived one, that Coffey woman, all corpulence, booze and cigars, who as the crisis worsened, was most vexed by the use of a certain kind of punctuation within the system.
Or you can think what ‘30p Lee Anderson’ (so named as he, on 80,000 a year plus, thinks 30p is enough to live on per day, plus its the Nurses fault for not budgeting).
Not sure if he was the Tory MP who accused the Royal College of Nursing (on strike for the first time ever) of effectively working for Putin.
Yes, they are as awful as that.
Not that it’s working if polling is remotely accurate.
For what its worth I neither did, nor would, vote for the bunch of self-serving idiots "running" the country now, and wouldn't challenge your views on the current incumbents.
(on a personal note, like you did, I'm about to go onto a reduced 3 day working week, being an old(er) git and all)
I suspect the reference to Manufacturing Engineering went over your head. ME is ALL about the provision of VALUEI worry that there is a ‘cost of everything, value of nothing’ issue here.
That was the whole point of my post, and the reference to a "system" with inputs (resources, money), a process (the provision of care), and an output (healthier, or better cared for people). The VALUE is the care provided. Lots of ambulances waiting in queues doesn't create value. Theatre staff available but not working doesn't create value. A senior staff nurse chasing round the hospital looking for an oxygen bottle doesn't create value.
If you don't think the Health service is a system that fits that description, I'd be interested to know.
Paradoxically, we've just had what I consider to be one of the most left wing, tax raising, budgets of any government for the last 20 years.
I certainly agree that more money is part of a solution.
But the supply of money is, and will be strictly limited.
The very taxes that provide that money are going to stifle GDP growth for years to come, and the IMF has clearly stated.
Which will stifle further funding growth
Whatever money is provided HAS to be spent as wisely as possible to provide the best value possible. That is surely just a fact, and not worthy of debate?
I don't think anyone would resent the health workers receiving a pay rise that at least matches inflation.
But that in itself will create inflationary pressure going forward and be self-perpetuating.
Back to the '70's again.
Whether you like the manufacturing analogy or not, the ONLY way to ever provide inflation matching wages and yet kill inflation, has been to increase productivity - in this case the more effective provision of care. And in the long term, the upshot of that is that fewer workers will be employed.
Not that I like it, but you watch what happens when an "unaffordable" pay award is agreed.
Watch ....
And no. The Conservatives aren't the only party that have wasted money in running the health system - it's been going on for decades, including Labour Governments.
I've watched them do it.
Is this lot the worst?
I couldn't argue with that.
My point is that it doesn't matter who runs it going forward, they have to fix structural issues that prevent the health system performing, in order to make the best use of the limited resources that will be available.
Not even a debate IMO. Surely?
Rgds
The money is there.
It's certainly there for BAE, Babcock, QinetiQ etc and rightly so.
I suspect you're looking at this too much from the angle of a manufacturing and processes man. We could go on with a billion examples of poor value/productivity we have witnessed or experienced in the healthcare sector. But in the grand scheme of things, they make little difference because the time to discharge (a metric used by medical teams and bed/site managers) doesn't change. There are over 10 000 medically fit patients on hospital wards ready for discharge as I write this. That's where the bottleneck is, caused by a lack of beds and staff in the community.
The population is aging, people are living longer, and we're intervening medically and surgically. Most of my family (and friends) are in this field. Hemis on fractured Nofs for 95 year olds are the norm. Probably a good time to buy shares in Stryker (orthopaedic stuff) and Medica (teleradiology).
I'm due to leave for work abroad shortly so I scheduled a gathering with friends this weekend gone to watch the rugby. One of the chaps works as an acute medicine consultant. We were at a steakhouse 5 minutes from the hospital and he was due to join us after his shift finished at 5. The last patient his junior clerked was an elderly lady who the care home called the ambulance for due to 'increasing confusion'. When he looked at her history, this was her 18th attendance since 2020 for the same reason. The care home are refusing to accept her back.
the time to discharge (a metric used by medical teams and bed/site managers) doesn't change. There are over 10 000 medically fit patients on hospital wards ready for discharge as I write this. That's where the bottleneck is, caused by a lack of beds and staff in the community.
astuteman wrote:
Yep. Apologies if this sent us down a bit of a rabbit hole.
Thanks for the chuckle though. After criticising me for using the angle of "a manufacturing and process man" you then went on to do exactly that ... e.g.the time to discharge (a metric used by medical teams and bed/site managers) doesn't change. There are over 10 000 medically fit patients on hospital wards ready for discharge as I write this. That's where the bottleneck is, caused by a lack of beds and staff in the community.
Exactly my points about a process that doesn't "flow", and therefore takes too long, because its bottlenecked.
You're not an ME on the QT are you?
The reason why I went down that route is that I feel the need to kick back at the "The money's there" argument.
Some money is there, without question.
You point out that other parts of public spending will be demanding funding too, rightly so, you said.
So it's not a bottomless pit, and fully justified pay rises will only sharpen the limitations.
Identify those bottlenecks (e.g. release of patients back into care) and watch the effectiveness of the system improve - even in areas where no money is spent.
This government absolutely deserves criticism for not doing that.
Rgds
pune wrote:c933103 wrote:pune wrote:
Think that's a very simplistic take and possibly that is what the media feeds, but if you look at the developing countries you would find they are still far far behind. For e.g. what do you think about Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, Qatar what would you say they are, developing or developed economies. Keeping in mind that they are similar or maybe tad smaller than UK. I would suggest that for bigger countries, denser populations etc. it is harder to get growth than the more smaller nimble countries, more so if they are democracies. There are solutions but they would need, for e.g. Proportional Representation could change lot of things. Also recall system. That would make political leaders more answerable to people. You need both. Unless that happens, don't see the laziness or unaccountability stopping anytime soon. And this is not just for UK, even countries like India too.
There are little bearing on whether they are democracy or whether they are using which exact election system. And country size also does not matter. The key matter is trade is open. That developing countries are still pretty far from developed countries just mean there are still more room for such process to continue.
Trade cannot happen by itself. You need foundation in engineering. You need R&D. The Chinese are spending 25-30% and more of their profits on it. Others are not. If you don't do research, you become stale in this competitive world. That's the reason Samsung for e.g. just opened one in Vietnam -
https://www.sammobile.com/news/samsung- ... ttend-vip/
c933103 wrote:pune wrote:c933103 wrote:There are little bearing on whether they are democracy or whether they are using which exact election system. And country size also does not matter. The key matter is trade is open. That developing countries are still pretty far from developed countries just mean there are still more room for such process to continue.
Trade cannot happen by itself. You need foundation in engineering. You need R&D. The Chinese are spending 25-30% and more of their profits on it. Others are not. If you don't do research, you become stale in this competitive world. That's the reason Samsung for e.g. just opened one in Vietnam -
https://www.sammobile.com/news/samsung- ... ttend-vip/
We are talking about trading of poduct of labour force on international labour market. Which is the main reason developing countries around the world are developing in the past half century. Domestic R&D aren't helping people in poor countries to earn US$10 a day instead of US$1 a day. This is a totally wrong approach to see the issue.
pune wrote:c933103 wrote:pune wrote:
Trade cannot happen by itself. You need foundation in engineering. You need R&D. The Chinese are spending 25-30% and more of their profits on it. Others are not. If you don't do research, you become stale in this competitive world. That's the reason Samsung for e.g. just opened one in Vietnam -
https://www.sammobile.com/news/samsung- ... ttend-vip/
We are talking about trading of poduct of labour force on international labour market. Which is the main reason developing countries around the world are developing in the past half century. Domestic R&D aren't helping people in poor countries to earn US$10 a day instead of US$1 a day. This is a totally wrong approach to see the issue.
I think there are two parts of the issue, one part is specifically that people whether in developing world or developed world want things at low-cost. If you want things at low-cost then only two ways to achieve it, either have manufacturing in developing countries or have more and more automation in developed countries. Both have their pros and cons. For e.g. as we see in the automotive industry, most of the legacy manufacturers are unable to make the new thing (EV's) as changes were little and not too often. Most safety changes were lobbied against so they don't have modular manufacturing which is need of the hour. This is what Tesla and the Chinese have been doing. And I think this type of manufacturing sooner or later would happen to all industries. Especially with enhancements in not just material science but nanotechnology. Those who can embrace the change will live while others will perish.
We don't look have to look far, after Meltdown and Spectre, Intel doesn't have as much pull as AMD has. While at one time Intel used to be the master and fund AMD so they are not hit by competitive fines by EU and others. Now it's the other way around. AMD are practically eating their lunch. The same is happening in mobile phones, except for Samsung, the market whether in India or abroad is captured by the Chinese. They produce fast, they change things fast and they spread knowledge within their own communities. In both these industries and more, there is a reason you have n number of competitors encouraged by the State itself.
My point is it's not just labor but more of a mixture of things. How do you drive competition in your own market will drive competition in others. Because the Chinese Govt. is allowing competition in the mobile space and the EV space the industries had to become nimble and be on the move all the while.
If you create barriers like UK has done, then of course you will lose advantage and your people will get lower quality of goods and less variety. At least when you were in EU, you had some competition and everybody had similar level playing field. Also when labor moves from X to Y they also learn new ways of doing things, culture etc. all of which one way or the other does benefit people back home.
This is from my country which is hoping to get some a fab going.
https://www.livemint.com/news/world/tai ... 10935.html
Now as you can see if my people have to acquire the new skills, they not only have to speak and learn about how semiconductors and fab equipment behave, they also would have to master Mandarin Chinese.
I wonder how many people in UK would be open to learning another language.
c933103 wrote:pune wrote:c933103 wrote:We are talking about trading of poduct of labour force on international labour market. Which is the main reason developing countries around the world are developing in the past half century. Domestic R&D aren't helping people in poor countries to earn US$10 a day instead of US$1 a day. This is a totally wrong approach to see the issue.
I think there are two parts of the issue, one part is specifically that people whether in developing world or developed world want things at low-cost. If you want things at low-cost then only two ways to achieve it, either have manufacturing in developing countries or have more and more automation in developed countries. Both have their pros and cons. For e.g. as we see in the automotive industry, most of the legacy manufacturers are unable to make the new thing (EV's) as changes were little and not too often. Most safety changes were lobbied against so they don't have modular manufacturing which is need of the hour. This is what Tesla and the Chinese have been doing. And I think this type of manufacturing sooner or later would happen to all industries. Especially with enhancements in not just material science but nanotechnology. Those who can embrace the change will live while others will perish.
We don't look have to look far, after Meltdown and Spectre, Intel doesn't have as much pull as AMD has. While at one time Intel used to be the master and fund AMD so they are not hit by competitive fines by EU and others. Now it's the other way around. AMD are practically eating their lunch. The same is happening in mobile phones, except for Samsung, the market whether in India or abroad is captured by the Chinese. They produce fast, they change things fast and they spread knowledge within their own communities. In both these industries and more, there is a reason you have n number of competitors encouraged by the State itself.
My point is it's not just labor but more of a mixture of things. How do you drive competition in your own market will drive competition in others. Because the Chinese Govt. is allowing competition in the mobile space and the EV space the industries had to become nimble and be on the move all the while.
If you create barriers like UK has done, then of course you will lose advantage and your people will get lower quality of goods and less variety. At least when you were in EU, you had some competition and everybody had similar level playing field. Also when labor moves from X to Y they also learn new ways of doing things, culture etc. all of which one way or the other does benefit people back home.
This is from my country which is hoping to get some a fab going.
https://www.livemint.com/news/world/tai ... 10935.html
Now as you can see if my people have to acquire the new skills, they not only have to speak and learn about how semiconductors and fab equipment behave, they also would have to master Mandarin Chinese.
I wonder how many people in UK would be open to learning another language.
People want things cheaply is not an "issue". It's an intrinsic nature of competition and of the market.
And it is not whether people in UK want to learn to get such a job, but rather the wage and working environment willing to ve offer by Foxconn is too low for workers and labor law in the UK. Even lower than what those workers are now protesting against.