![]() |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Looks like the Government is going ahead with it. 1.25% NI rise.
|
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
|
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
I paid in for my mother and my other elderly relatives. It's called paying forwards and eventually your offspring will be paying forward if we don't go daft and return to the system that was available before the advent of the NHS ect.Not sure I care to return to the days of the poorhouse or people dying in pain because they had no money to pay for healthcare.
|
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
It's not as if we're talking about people who could spend the money on a world cruise or something. They are not meant to be physically capable of doing that, that is why they need the care. In that sense the current situation, works and is fair and right. Those that can pay are required to do so, and those that can't, aren't required to do so. |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
Basically, what we pay while of working age is used to fund those who are retired, when we then retire, our pension etc is funded by those who come after us. One of the arguments going around is that people are living longer so more money is needed, however this *should* be offset by the amount of people working compared to, say, 1950 for example . . but the NHS was well run back then though ;) |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
|
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Life is a pyramid scheme mate, the base is getting larger all the time but the foundations can't handle it.
Too many people looking for handouts instead of taking responsibility. |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
It's a lot deeper than that - especially from the perspective of today's pensionable generation.
When they were of early working age, care homes were routinely run by local councils. Quite frankly, they wanted to shed themselves of the responsibility particularly as their poor performance won no votes. So the councils divested themselves of care home responsibility and put it into the profit making private sector. I don't recall a huge outcry when this started - possibly because it simply passed working people by. If councils resumed responsibility, it would have to be paid for through the Council Tax or through government grants funded from wealth generated taxes. My fear is that there'll be another show speech, lacking in proper content, as a sham disguising a rise that will only fund the NHS. I expect Boris to trumpet the headline figure without separating the regions; England will be no wiser as to what it means for them as there is no English Parliament (nor should there be). But honest politicians is what is really needed. Boris will say he's solving the problem when he obviously isn't, especially when you look at Hugh's fag packet calculation. |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
The base isn’t getting larger - the population and number of net contributors isn’t rising in line with the number extracting money from the system as people live for longer and claim far more in pensions than they claim to have “paid in”. Until they want to solve this structural problem we will continue to paper over the cracks. |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
|
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
The 'structural problem' as to income isn't something that can be messed with much, however where the money goes to is a different matter. I could post a number of examples where money is 'thrown' at to appease the sensitive among us, but no doubt I'd be met by a wall of flame by those who want money for their cause at the expense of the public good :p: |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
My goodness how many Scrooges do we have on CF? |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
ps . . don't mention roaming charges when they jet off abroad either ;) |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
Quote:
A couple of things jump out at me, why is care so expensive, why does the average residential home cost more per night than a decent hotel and why do people have to pay when large corporations don't, we know they've bought and paid for bozo and his chums but they can't expect a free ride because of that forever |
Re: This NI increase for Social/Health Care
The private sector tripled capacity in the space of a decade. The demand must've been there. That freed up local authority places for those that really needed them.
The standards in private sector places must have been higher than council run places, as people were expected to pay for it. Taking over council run homes wouldn't have been a real option, they wouldn't have been good enough. So were council care homes sold off? Or is it a baseless rant? How many were simply moved out of hospitals? IIRC Where I once lived(late 1970s) there was a large geriatric hospital, it is now a more general type of hospital. A big reason for the shift in council to private, wasn't selling off of council run homes, but shifting costs from councils to the benefit system which paid for the private care instead. The predicted increase in demand(doubling?) in the next couple of decades is huge. Who is going to provide that? if a person, in different circumstances, could be cared for at home by relatives, doesn't that mean they are not really an NHS matter and not necessarily provided for free. As in the 1980s where funding increasingly came from the benefits system, doesn't that also indicate it isn't an NHS matter. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:09. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum