Q from me
If the NHS is really facing a £30bn funding shortfall, would you rather a) pay £1000 more a year in tax or b) pay £1000 a year to a private healthcare supplier? Seems pretty likely that one of those (almost certainly the latter) will end up being the case
I'd want to understand more about the shortfall first. As far as I know the NHS budget goes up every year, so a shortfall could be from any number of reasons:
1) Waste
2) Bloated salaries (in management for example)
3) They were underfunded to begin with
4) Population is growing and needs more funding to support it
Depending on what the primary driver is of the shortfall depends on how I'd prefer to pay my £1k. If it's 3 or 4 then I'm much more open to paying extra tax rather than sorting myself out on my own.
If it's (4) then I want to understand why the increased population are not generating associated tax receipts to pay for the increased strain on services.
Services have been underfunded over the years, made worse by an increase in expected living age and growth in child numbers, in part due to immigration.
This has been made worse by poor management, rather than simply waste.
Tbh I take any notions of the NHS budget being protected and seeing real terms growth as govt propaganda. Ask anyone who works in the NHS, which includes me, you will be informed that frontline services have actually been cut, in part due to efficiency savings.Which is just a term used to cut staff numbers. My own service has seen at least a 30% reduction in staff/services the past few years.
Rising drug costs is also not true in many areas. A lot of drugs are now 'off licence' and been replaced by generic brands. There is also a lot of co-op buying of drugs by Trusts to gain greater wholesale prices