Gulf Today

This election is a chance to save the NHS UNITED KINGDOM

- Youssef El-gingihy, The Independen­t

Privatisat­ion has been slowly advancing on the NHS for decades, but if the Tories win a majority, it could soon be kicked into high gear

This December’s general election could be a momentous turning point for the United Kingdom — a nation deciding whether it will opt for a hard Brexit, a sot one, or even no Brexit at all.

It could also decide whether the NHS continues down the road to a two-tier healthcare system or whether it is restored as a publicly funded, owned and run system.

This week’s Channel 4 Dispatches programme exposed secret negotiatio­ns between senior UK civil servants and both US government officials and American pharmaceut­ical executives, who have apparently discussed NHS drug pricing and caps several times.according to polls, the British public is very concerned about the fate of the NHS in any post-brexit trade deal. But the fact that these negotiatio­ns have happened should not exactly come as a surprise.

Trump may have already let the mask slip on his state visit last summer when he blurted out that the NHS would be “on the table” as part of a US-UK trade deal. In fact, as I have outlined in the new edition of my book How to Dismantle the NHS in 10 Easy Steps, the health service has been on sale for a long time. In fact, as I have outlined in the new edition of my book How to Dismantle the NHS in 10 Easy Steps, NHS marketisat­ion and privatisat­ion have been underway since the 1980s, moving in four main phases.

First came the introducti­on of the internal or limited markets in the 1990s under the Conservati­ves. This was followed by the expansion of this market under New Labour, who introduced greater outsourcin­g and public private partnershi­ps such as PFI.

The coalition government’s Health and Social Care Act 2012 accelerate­d privatisat­ion, and the post-2015 Us-style integrated care programme aims to consolidat­e privatisat­ion through the tendering of long-term multi-billion pound contracts for whole swathes of regional health and social care. Outsourcin­g and restructur­ing are administer­ed from the outside by management consultanc­ies, the big four accountanc­y firms and magic circle law firms.

The NHS market experiment has been nothing short of catastroph­ic. It has manufactur­ed a permanent state of crisis. The costs of market mechanisms have escalated dramatical­ly; tens of billions have been channeled into PFI.

Yet despite these all-too-evident disasters, a US-UK trade deal would most likely see the NHS transforme­d by “deregulati­on max”, with public services liberalise­d or opened up to transnatio­nal investors and corporatio­ns.it could also see the introducti­on of Investor State Dispute Setlement (ISDS) clauses, mechanisms that enable corporatio­ns to sue government­s if they take steps to reverse measures that might harm future profits. ISDS clauses would deter the UK government from bringing services back in-house — effectivel­y locking privatisat­ion in.

This precedent has been applied in tens of cases across the world in various other trade agreements.

Only last year, parliament voted to pass CETA – the Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement – an Eu-canada trade deal. The arrangemen­t includes a proposal for an “investment court system”’, or arbitratio­n courts for investors.

As Green MEP Molly Scot-cato has writen, under CETA, all services will be subject to a liberalise­d trade system unless exempt. This slim exemption would appear to only apply to core government functions, such as law enforcemen­t, the judiciary and central banking — not to the NHS.

A Trump-johnson trade deal would also harmonise or align regulation­s between both countries. From the UK’S point of view, that would mean ripping up workers’ rights, environmen­tal protection­s and health and safety rules.

Admitedly, remaining in the EU could have seen the NHS opened up to the terms of future EU-US trade agreements. However, a groundswel­l of protest against the proposed TTIP treaty forced the EU to abandon its original negotiatin­g directives on that particular deal. But post-brexit, an isolated Britain would clearly be the junior partner, with the US dictating the terms.

With the US healthcare market increasing­ly saturated, American companies are increasing­ly looking for global markets, and they’ve been pursuing opportunit­ies in the UK for years. Corporatio­ns such as Unitedheal­th were forming partnershi­ps with the NHS far back as 2003, while the management consultanc­y juggernaut Mckinsey has its fingerprin­ts all over NHS reforms, such as the current efficiency savings or cuts approachin­g £40 billion for this decade.

On the UK side, a disturbing revolving door patern has emerged. Ater current NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens served as Tony Blair’s main health advisor, he then went off to work for for Unitedheal­th for the best part of a decade, during which time he lobbied for TTIP and global expansion and against Obamacare.

Similarly, prior to his appointmen­t, Cameron’s main health advisor Nick Seddon proposed that the NHS should merge with insurance companies. He eventually departed his role for Optum – the UK arm of Unitedheal­th.

At every stage, Conservati­ve ministers have fallen over another to issue denials that the NHS is under threat. However, Boris Johnson’s government have been economical with the truth, announcing extra money for the NHS that turned out to be nothing more than a reallocati­on of funds, while hospital building programmes shrank from 40 entirely new hospitals to just six reconfigur­ations.

The good news is that we can save the NHS. Jeremy Corbyn has vowed to reverse NHS privatisat­ion. Still, a Corbyn government would be up against powerful corporate and financial interests.

That means we need a mass movement demanding a wider programme of policies around publicly owned public services, a green economy, the reversal of financiali­sation and the unwinding of the corporate capture of democracy. Only then can we realise a progressiv­e vision for the future.

 ?? File/ Reuters ?? British Prime Minister Boris Johnson gestures as he speaks to Dr Sarah Bowdin at the National Institute for Health Research at the Cambridge Clinical Research Facility, in Addenbrook­e’s Hospital in Cambridge, Britain.
File/ Reuters British Prime Minister Boris Johnson gestures as he speaks to Dr Sarah Bowdin at the National Institute for Health Research at the Cambridge Clinical Research Facility, in Addenbrook­e’s Hospital in Cambridge, Britain.

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