NHS news review

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One wheel on his wagon, but Lansley’s still rolling / Features / Home – Morning Star Recommended.

HealthInvestor – Article: Ministers urged to allow hospitals to fail ahead of public services White Paper

Interesting that the Con-Dem Conservative Liberal-Democrat coalition government is applying the ideology of the abolition of the NHS to public services generally. “Please, sir, I want some more.”

Cuts to fire services mean that fire engines will not be routinely despatched to hospitals when alarms ring.

Conservative election poster 2010

A few recent news articles concerning the UK’s Conservative and Liberal-Democrat coalition government – the ConDem’s – brutal attack on the National Health Service.

One wheel on his wagon, but Lansley’s still rolling / Features / Home – Morning Star

It may have “paused” temporarily, and been cosmetically adjusted in a bid to defuse Lib Dem opposition, but Andrew Lansley’s Health Bill is far from dead.

Instead Lansley himself has now urged more rapid progress in implementing it, even before the delayed parliamentary process is complete.

David Cameron and Lansley are so fixated on carrying through their plan, which seeks to transform the NHS into a competitive market and slice off billions of the £100 billion NHS budgets to benefit private providers that they are ignoring even major setbacks like the high-profile resignation of national heart tsar Professor Roger Boyle.

Boyle, a highly respected doctor and author of the influential 2007 policy to reform stroke services, told the Health Service Journal he was opposed to the government laying waste to large parts of the NHS.

He opposed the closure of primary care trusts and strategic health authorities and ridiculed the idea that the NHS is “over-managed” to the extent claimed by ministers.

Boyle is not the only one expressing concerns.

Supporting a motion moved by GPs, the BMA has again, despite pleas from its leaders, voted overwhelmingly for the Bill to be withdrawn, branding it the biggest-ever threat to the NHS.

The BMA has also published a survey showing thousands of GPs are planning to retire rather than implement the Bill and that a large majority of GPs have major concerns about Lansley’s wholesale restructuring of the NHS.

These are the key people who are supposed to implement the changes and the only ones seeming to benefit from them.

Their hospital colleagues have now woken up to the fact that the Bill would largely exclude them from any voice, relegating them to the back of the NHS terraces while the GPs are dragged reluctantly into the directors’ box.

Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) president Clare Gerada has also challenged government attempts to “railroad” the Bill through.

The amendments to it do not address fundamental problems, but would mean that 163 NHS bodies being abolished would be replaced by more than three times as many new bodies to be involved in the decision-making process.

“The RCGP’s tally of new quangos includes 300 commissioning groups, 150 health and well-being boards, 50 PCT clusters, 15 clinical senates, four SHA clusters, the national commissioning board and the Department of Health,” she told the GP magazine Pulse.

HealthInvestor – Article: Ministers urged to allow hospitals to fail ahead of public services White Paper

The government has published its Open Public Services White Paper, which aims to enshrine the right to a choice of public service provider in law.

It comes as government documents come to light warning ministers that hospitals and schools must be allowed to fail if the transformation of public services is to be successful.

The public services white paper, published today, sets out a series of reforms to help drive competition and localism across the entire public service industry. The Any Willing Provider model is expected to be applied to every part of the public sector to allow charities, mutuals and private providers to flourish and give people a range of service providers to choose from. The Ombudsmans’ role will be changed to “an enforcer of choice” to ensure a plurality of providers are available to anyone accessing health, education and neighbourhood services.

Prime minister David Cameron, announcing the public service reforms, said it was “something very big and very different” and that the “old, closed, state monopoly is dead.” The white paper was originally due to be published last autumn, but has been repeatedly delayed. The drive towards a range of independent providers is likely to be seen by public sector unions as a move towards the privatisation of key public services.

Obesity and the NHS: ‘People here are in big trouble’ | Society | The Guardian

Uncomfortable conversations about rationed operations are likely to become a more regular part of doctors’ work in the next few years, as the squeeze on NHS funding becomes more intense. Although the coalition promised to ringfence NHS funding, government spending on healthcare will remain flat until 2015, at a time when demand on the service is rising. The NHS was already committed to finding £20bn worth of savings (or “productivity improvements”) by 2015 and, as a result, all parts of the NHS are under pressure to reduce costs. Imposing tighter limits on certain procedures, such as gastric bands, is one way money will be saved.

This week, the Guardian reported that waiting lists for tests and treatment are already beginning to rise all over the country, and staff at Heartlands know that they are entering a period of financial austerity. The Heart of England Trust, which embraces three hospitals across Birmingham (including Heartlands), has agreed to shave 4% from its £600m annual budget – equivalent to £24m – every year until 2015, and expects to cut 1,600 posts out of the total headcount of around 10,000.

For the moment the full force of the impending squeeze on costs has yet to be felt, erupting only occasionally in unexpected rationing. Dr Taheri says he describes himself as “a fairly mild-mannered, calm person”, but he is increasingly angry about the new restrictions on treatment. “About 30% of the patients need things that we’re not able to get them. This is going to be the challenge, to explain to patients that we can’t do things,” he says.

This is Hull and East Riding | Hull hospitals chief criticises Humberside Fire alarm cuts

PATIENTS’ lives will be put at risk by fire brigade cutbacks, the region’s hospitals chief has warned.

Under new plans, firefighters will no longer automatically turn out to the region’s main hospitals when an alarm sounds.

Humberside Fire And Rescue Service currently sends two fire engines to Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill Hospital when an alarm goes off.

But now, fire officials are considering only dispatching crews if hospital staff confirm there is a blaze.

Phil Morley, chief executive of Hull And East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust, said: “If the changes are made, I have told them they have to accept accountability for any patient death from a fire.

“It would be unbelievable, unacceptable and wholly inadequate.

“In the interests of patient safety, we should be a priority if an alarm goes off. It is acting quickly that saves lives.”

The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) claimed the new system will be like “playing Russian Roulette with hospital staff, patients’ and firefighters’ lives”.

Fears private firms will ‘cherry pick’ profitable council services in shake-up – Liverpool News – News – Liverpool Daily Post

PRIVATE firms and charities will be able to demand the right to run almost every public service – from schools and day centres, to libraries and leisure centres – under radical government plans unveiled yesterday.

An Ombudsman will rule on whether companies and voluntary groups have been

“unfairly precluded” from tendering for contracts currently held by local authorities, for example.

The idea is modelled on the plans to allow “any willing provider” to run NHS services, in legislation that triggered a storm of protest that forced David Cameron to retreat.

Unveiling the flagship “Open Public Services” White Paper, David Cameron vowed the Government was “releasing the grip of state control and putting power in people’s hands”.

But ministers were put on the back foot by confidential documents that showed civil servants had warned the plans would only work if existing, unsuccessful services – such as schools and hospitals – were allowed to collapse.

BBC News – Long hospital waits ‘on the increase’

The number of people facing “long waits” for hospital treatment in England is rising, NHS figures show.

Under the NHS Constitution, patients have a right to be seen in 18 weeks.

But there are currently 236,155 on the waiting list who have waited longer than that – a rise of 8.5% in a year, according to official data. Nearly half have waited more than six months.

The government said there could be valid medical or personal reasons for long waits.

However, doctors blamed the rise on the squeeze in budgets that is increasingly being seen in the health service.

The most common treatments people are facing long waits for is in orthopaedics, which includes operations such as knee and hip replacements.

Peter Kay, president of the British Orthopaedic Association and a former adviser to the Department of Health, said the sheer numbers waiting longer than 18 weeks meant it was unlikely to be solely for personal or medical reasons.

He said the focus of hospitals was now slipping and patients were being left waiting for too long.

And he added: “One of the issues with 18 weeks is that once you have missed the boat there is less incentive to get the patient treated. They get left on the list for longer than they otherwise would.”

BBC News – Leicester NHS staff worried over missing payments

About 200 staff at a Leicester hospital say they are concerned missing overtime payments are due to their NHS trust’s troubled financial position.

Union Unison said 200 staff at the Leicester Royal Infirmary had not received pay for extra shifts and overtime this month.

The University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust has an overspend of £7m, three months into the financial year.

In a statement, the trust said payments would be processed in a week’s time.

“All staff have received their basic pay for June, but additional payments are dealt with separately, and a small number of those payments go through a supplementary run which occurs in the week following payday,” the statement said.

But Adrian Morgan, area organiser for Unison in Leicestershire, said staff had been told different things when querying the missing payments.

“A couple of people have phoned payroll and asked why they haven’t got their enhanced payments and they were told the signature on the overtime sheet isn’t legible or acceptable any more but these are from managers that have signed forms for years and years.

“It is very conflicting information,” he said.

Mr Morgan said staff were beginning to suspect the trust was hanging on to payments “to try to garner some interest”.

Can the NHS exist without managers? – Views – OnMedica

NHS managers have accused Health Secretary, Andrew Lansley, of failing to support them in their efforts to save money and lead the reform of the health service.

After a 20-minute speech to the NHS Confederation’s annual conference in Manchester last Thursday, Lansley was asked to be more vocal in his support for NHS leaders, helping to raise their profile in the media.

A young man in the audience, who only started working in NHS management two years ago, said: “I have quickly recognised the role that leaders play and the absolute benefits they bring. I do not, therefore, understand why I have to go home and convince my friends and family of the pivotal role we all play. Can you not do more to make clear the difference between bureaucracy and essential leadership – in the public arena and through the press – so that I do not have to go home and convince people myself?”

Continue ReadingNHS news review

Nick Clegg lies about the NHS

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Image of David 'Pinoccio' Cameron and Nick Clegg. Image is originally from the UK's Mirror newspaper. Looks like Bliar doesn't he? Cameron seems to be apingning/copying Bliar's public image ~ speeches aligning himslf with Bliar ... and of course ... who Bliar aligned with ...Nick Clegg has made a deceitful and evasive speech on the NHS. Deceitful since he suggests that all will be well and hiding the fact that the Destroy the NHS bill is intended to reduce the scope of the NHS. Evasive by avoiding any mention of privatisation or the role of private providers. It’s a feel-good speech intended to reassure people that everything is OK, that there is no need to worry, that he, Cameron and Lansley can be trusted to look after the NHS. The lying, evil sods.

We know from the experience of tuition fees and V.A.T. that Nick Clegg is a shameless liar. We know that he lies to decieve people. We know that he’s a slippery shit in the tradition of UK politicians.

Some of the lies and evasions I pulled from his speech today:

“When Beveridge first proposed a nationalised health service in 1942, he didn’t prescribe exactly how it should work.

 

He called for a comprehensive service to ensure every citizen can get “whatever medical treatment he requires in whatever form he requires it.”

Care, free at the point of use, based on need and not ability to pay.

No government worth its salt – certainly, no government of which I am a part – will ever jeopardise that.”

That’s a lie. The current coalition government – of which Clegg is a part – is intending to do away with a comprehensive health service free at the point of use.

“The comfort of knowing that the NHS will always be there for you.

If you’re in an accident, if you get ill, if your family need treatment.

And it will always be free. No bills, no credit cards, no worries about money when you’re worrying about your health.

That’s why I have been absolutely clear: there will be no privatisation of the NHS.”

There are a few lies here.

Firstly, GP consortia will commission services. They decide which services will be available. With cuts to spending they will cut the range of services available. There will also be some expensively ill people that will likely not have a GP. This means that the NHS will not “always be there for you”.

Secondly, perhaps not an outright lie but certainly intended to mislead and give a fase impression: “it will always be free …”. No it won’t always be free. If you need a treatment that is not provided by your local GP commissioning group, you will have to pay or go without.

Thirdly, again perhaps not an oughtright lie:“there will be no privatisation of the NHS”. There will be private provision of services not offered by a reduced NHS. There will be private providers within the NHS. It will not be wholly privatised but there will be hugely increased involvement of private providers.

Clegg continues by saying “The NHS has always benefited from a mix of providers, from the private sector, charities and social enterprises, and that should continue.”

Notice what’s missing? The public sector. Is he saying that the public sector should not continue to play a role in the NHS?

Charities and social enterprises are private providers in a sense. They certainly are not public sector.

“People want choice: over their GP, where to give birth, which hospital to use.

But providing that choice isn’t the same as allowing private companies to cherry-pick NHS services.

It’s not the same as turning this treasured public service into a competition-driven, dog-eat-dog market where the NHS is flogged off to the highest bidder.”

Choice. People don’t really want choice. They want a good service that doesn’t unduly inconvenience them e.g. having to travel to a distant hospital.

Clegg is deliberately misconstruing the argument, putting up a straw-man by saying that the NHS will not be sold off to the highest bidder. It’s about providing a restricted health service where you will have to pay – or go without – services that are not provided.

[27/5/11 edit: It’s also the first stage in the process of privatisation and transition to a private insurance-based health service on the US model.]

“I’ve heard people suggest that our reforms could lead to politicians washing their hands of our health services, because of the way the Bill is phrased.

So we need to be clearer – the Secretary of State will continue to be accountable for your health services.

This is your NHS; funded by your taxes and you have a right to know there is someone at the very top, answerable to you. With a public duty to ensure a comprehensive health service, accessible to all.”

Clegg is employing the worn-out argument that they have failed to properly explain the proposed changes. The truth is that the more people understand, the more they object.

He’s defending the Health Secretary no longer being responsible for providing the health service, arguing against what Colin Leys said ‘The bill removes the secretary of state’s responsibility to provide a national health service and doesn’t assign it to anyone else. She or he would only be charged with “promoting” it.’

Clegg suggests that this is merely phrasing when it is crucial. If it is only a matter of phrasing, then we’ll have the phrasing that the Health Secretary will provide a health service.

“opening up”

Clegg is defending the Bill to abolish the NHS contrary to the instruction of his Spring Conference. He needs to be dumped asap.

Continue ReadingNick Clegg lies about the NHS

The Plot Against the NHS #2

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The plot against the NHS
The plot against the NHS

Selected excerpts from ‘The Plot Against the NHS’ by Colin Leys and Stewart Player. Chapter One is available here. I highly recommend this book available from Merlin Press for £10.

p.148~154 References in the original.

Within the BMA a strong challenge emerged to the leadership’s position of ‘critical engagement’ with the government’s plans, and a demand for outright opposition. The development of serious opposition from a large part of the medical profession, and especially from GPs , was significant, because Lansley constantly claimed to have their support.

The false case for the Health and Social Care Bill

The government’s claim that the NHS was in urgent need of further fundamental reform was also becoming more and more obviously false. During the previous ten years, while the NHS was being covertly marketized, the Labour government had raised NHS funding rapidly towards the average level of spending of the other major countries of Western Europe. Spending on the NHS still remained significantly below that of the richer EU nations, and a significant portion of the new funding was absorbed by the cost of market creation. But the extra cash also produced some important improvements. Staff levels were improved, waiting times for elective care were sharply reduced, facilities were renovated or replaced.

This was reflected in the high marks given to the NHS in the Commonwealth Fund report cited in chapter 1. And by 2010 the particular charge constantly made by the marketizers, that England lagged behing European countries in the survival rates for major killer illnesses, was ceasing to be true. Lansley repeatedly declared that a wholesale restructuring of the NHS was ‘a necessity, not an option’, and David Cameron asserted that ‘pretending that there is some “easy option” of sticking with the status quo… is a complete fiction’. But in January 2011, coinciding with the publication of the Health and Social Care Bill, a paper by the King’s Fund economist John Appleby, published in the BMJ, showed tha t the marketizers’ charge was unfounded. It turned out to rest partly on the use of European data that were not comparable with the English data (and in some cases highly unreliable), and partly on selecting static data instead of trends over time. For several of the conditions usually cited English survival rates have in fact been improving so fast over the last 30 years that if the trends continue they will overtake
European rates by 2012.

The real choice

The choice is not between change and no change. It is between handing over a public service to be developed by private enterprise in the interests of shareholders, and ensuring that it develops in the interests of the public – and as the public sees those interests, not as politicians declare them to be. To maintain that there is no capacity for improvement within public provision is empty rhetoric. What evidence is there that public servcies are incapable of change and improvement (provided they are not undermined by financial starvation or market-driven disorganization)?

Around the world there are various examples of excellent public and publicly-provided health services, and all of them need to be studied for ways to improve the NHS in England – and beginning with an examination of those that are developing within the UK itself. The national media largely ignore what occurs across our nearest borders, but what is happening there, and especially in Scotland and Wales, raise crucially important questions about the future now being charted for the NHS in England.

Looking at Scotland

Even before devolution health ministers in Westminster had been too aware of Scottish sentiment to risk pushing the internal market very far there, and the Labour-Liberal Democrat coalition governments that held office in Scotland after devolution, from 1999 to 2007, recognised that voters would not support them if they followed England’s path to a healthcare market. Scotland’s Area Health Boards remained in place, foundation trust status was not introduced, nor was payment by results. The PFI was used for three Scottish hospital-building schemes, and one Independent Sector Treatment Centre was opened at Strathco in Angus. But these measures provoked intense controversy and in 2003, responding to pressure from both doctors and the public, the coalition government ended the purchaser-provider split, restoring direct administration to the NHS in Scotland and decisively closing off the market option. Also in response to public opinion, in 2002 the Scottish Labour-Lib Dem coalition made personal care for the elderly free, instead of means-tested as in England.

The 2007 elections, however, led to the formation of a minority SNP government, and yet further departures from the market-driven policy that was being pursued in England. In 2008 hospital car parking charges – a significant deterrant for families – were abolished, except at PFI hospitals, where legal reasons prevented it; and in 2010 plans were announced to abolish prescription charges from 2011. No further PFI schemes have been undertaken. Glasgow’s biggest acute hospital is being built with public funds, the ISTC at Stracathro was taken into public ownership, and plans to outsource the management of a health centre in Lanarkshire to a private company were dropped. Out-of-hours care is publicly provided.

Perhaps most significant of all for the future, in 2009 elections were introduced for the majority of the members of Scotland’s Health Boards, beginning with two pilot schemes to be evaluated after four years. This means that in addition to professional medical judgement democratic representation, rather than individual ‘patient choice’, could become a significant element in determining the direction of future change.

In face of all this the marketizers inevitably portrey Scotland’s NHS as a failure, with the usual misuse of statistics to support their claim. For example they routinely state that Scotland’s waiting times are worse than England’s, because no element of competition has been introduced into Scotland’s. In fact an analysis of newly-consolidated data concludes that since 2005 waiting times have fallen faster in Scotland than in England. In each year since then Scotland has actually had either the second shortest or (more often) the shortest waiting times of the four nations in the UK. And over the ten years from 1999 to 2008 Scotland’s mortality rates for all causes of death declined almost exactly as fast as England’s. As Dr Matthew Dunnigan, the author of the waiting times analysis, says, the objective comparison of English health statistics with those for the three devolved nations is now a very important task.

Looking at Wales

The story in Wales has many similarities to Scotland’s. For the first eight years following devolution a Labour minority government was in office, only giving way to a Labour-Plaid Cymru coalition in 2007. But as in Scotland, even the initial Labour-led Welsh Assembly Government did not dare follow the English path. The purchaser-provider split remained, but Wales did not adopt foundation trusts or payment by results. Development remained based on collaboration and planning, rather than on a market system with legally enforcable contracts and all the tensions and extra administrative costs involved.

And after 2007, under the Labour-Plaid coalition, the purchaser-provider split was dropped. In 2009 a major reform resulted in the formation of just seven integrated Local Health Boards to plan and operate the NHS in Wales. These are very like the Area Health Boards in Scotland, but also have overall responsibility for all aspects of health, including public health, with a strong emphasis on linking health and social care.

The Local Health Boards in Wales are not elected but they must have members representing local primary care, community care, public health, local government and voluntary organizations, as well as lay members. In one Local Health Board (Powys) the purchaser-provider split was abolished earlier and the Board was integrated with primary care and community health service providers. Other Boards are set to follow suit – exactly the opposite direction of change from that taken in England, where even community health services have been forced into the marketplace.

Wales also declined to use the PFI for hospital-building, led the way (in 2007) in abolishing prescription charges, abolished hospital parking charges, and dealt with the vexed issue of means-tested personal care for the elderly by widening the definition of what is considered nursing care (and therefore free), and by setting a flat-rate contribution to the cost of personal care throughout the whole country.

Considerations for England

We need to ask ourselves why Scotland and Wales opted to keep the NHS as a public service, and even extend the principle of free acess. Longstanding Scottish and Welsh cultural traditions are certainly important, especially a deeply-embedded commitment to social democracy in public life, and in the medical profession, which politicians of all parties have to respect. But another key reason is cost. Next to education health is by far the most important and expensive devolved publis service. Even before the financial crisis politicians of all parties in Scotland and Wales realised that if they followed the English route, and allowed the costs of operating a market to start soaking up ten per cent or more of the health budget, health services would be liable to deteriorate, with dire political consequences for themselves.

They know that the public spending cuts imposed by the government in Westminster will hit Scottish and Welsh health services. But they also know that the effects will be smaller that they would have been had they opted for a market, and that whatever they have to do will have a legitimate foundation in public opinion, which remains at the base of decison-making about the NHS in both countries. And when the crisis has passed they will still have a public health service, not a three-tiered healthcare market and a low-risk playground for healthcare corporations and ‘doctorpreneurs’.

Scotland and Wales don’t exhaust the alternatives for the future in England. Other good models of publically-provided health services exist and deserve study. But the successful evolution of the NHS in the rest of the UK shows that Cameron’s assertion that ‘we can’t afford not to modernise’ – meaning that we have no alternative but to accept the abolition of the NHS as a public service – is pure bluster. It has no foundation in evidence and serves no interest except that of the private health industry. In the parts of the UK that the plot against the NHS couldn’t reach, people see through it. They know that good health care for all means excluding profit-making, and have shown that with sufficient public backing that principle can prevail. We need to insist that in England too the NHS is not for selling.

Continue ReadingThe Plot Against the NHS #2

A good year for the Rich and it’s only February

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This article by Cut n Paste from http://bristol.indymedia.org.uk/article/703298

703298_photo_1.jpg

Bristol loses 28million pounds worth of services and big business has a great month of bonuses (paid for by us) and tax breaks, while at the same time announcing  job cuts for thousands of people.

So first up we have Lord Oakeshot resigns as treasury spokesmen moves to back benches in disgust at Osborne’s farcical Project Merlin which will lead to bankers receiving huge bonuses again.

Barclays boss, Bob Diamond will get a bonus of least £8m, they are planning to cut about 4,000 jobs in its retail bank.

Stuart Gulliver of HSBC at least £9bn.

Stephen Hester, chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland, is to take a £2.04m bonus for last year at the same time they are making plans to cut 2,300 jobs, which ironically they announced only hours after its former chief executive Sir Fred Goodwin had publicly apologised for the Edinburgh-based bank’s downfall.

Eric Daniels, his soon-to-depart counterpart at bailed-out Lloyds Banking Group, is to receive £1.45m,  while the Lloyds Banking Group is also expected to cut thousands of jobs.

As the Guardian states:

Oakeshott, a former City financier and a close ally of Cable’s, had been scathing. Speaking while still a Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman, he laid into the Treasury’s negotiators saying: “They’ve got an awful combination of arrogance and incompetence, most of them couldn’t negotiate themselves out of a paper bag.”

Oakeshott, who was not in the government but spoke for the junior coalition partner on Treasury matters in the Lords, stood down shortly after he criticised officials working on the government’s deal with the bankers and said: “If this is robust action on bank bonuses, my name’s Bob Diamond.”

So massive bank bonuses and huge job cuts seem to be the deal of the day.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/feb/09/lord-oakeshott-quits-banking-deal

Then we have a change in Tax law that massively benefit the rich and means we lose out hugely in tax revenues which could fund public services and stop cuts.

As George Monbiot states in the Guardian:

“At the moment tax law ensures that companies based here, with branches in other countries, don’t get taxed twice on the same money. They have to pay only the difference between our rate and that of the other country. If, for example, Dirty Oil plc pays 10% corporation tax on its profits in Oblivia, then shifts the money over here, it should pay a further 18% in the UK, to match our rate of 28%. But under the new proposals, companies will pay nothing at all in this country on money made by their foreign branches.

Foreign means anywhere. If these proposals go ahead, the UK will be only the second country in the world to allow money that has passed through tax havens to remain untaxed when it gets here. The other is Switzerland. The exemption applies solely to “large and medium companies”: it is not available for smaller firms. The government says it expects “large financial services companies to make the greatest use of the exemption regime”. The main beneficiaries, in other words, will be the banks.

But that’s not the end of it. While big business will be exempt from tax on its foreign branch earnings, it will, amazingly, still be able to claim the expense of funding its foreign branches against tax it pays in the UK. No other country does this. The new measures will, as we already know, accompany a rapid reduction in the official rate of corporation tax: from 28% to 24% by 2014. This, a Treasury minister has boasted, will be the lowest rate “of any major western economy”. By the time this government is done, we’ll be lucky if the banks and corporations pay anything at all. In the Sunday Telegraph, David Cameron said: “What I want is tax revenue from the banks into the exchequer, so we can help rebuild this economy.” He’s doing just the opposite.

So how did this happen? You don’t have to look far to find out. Almost all the members of the seven committees the government set up “to provide strategic oversight of the development of corporate tax policy” are corporate executives. Among them are representatives of Vodafone, Tesco, BP, British American Tobacco and several of the major banks: HSBC, Santander, Standard Chartered, Citigroup, Schroders, RBS and Barclays.

Reading Treasure Islands, I have realised that injustice of the kind described in this column is no perversion of the system; it is the system. Tony Blair came to power after assuring the City of his benign intentions. He then deregulated it and cut its taxes. Cameron didn’t have to assure it of anything: his party exists to turn its demands into public policy. Our ministers are not public servants. They work for the people who fund their parties, run the banks and own the newspapers, shielding them from their obligations to society, insulating them from democratic challenge.

Our political system protects and enriches a fantastically wealthy elite, much of whose money is, as a result of their interesting tax and transfer arrangements, in effect stolen from poorer countries, and poorer citizens of their own countries. Ours is a semi-criminal money-laundering economy, legitimised by the pomp of the lord mayor’s show and multiple layers of defence in government. Politically irrelevant, economically invisible, the rest of us inhabit the margins of the system. Governments ensure that we are thrown enough scraps to keep us quiet, while the ultra-rich get on with the serious business of looting the global economy and crushing attempts to hold them to account.”

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/feb/07/tax-city-heist-of-century

And finally surprise, surprise The Con Dem government is full of ex wankers oh sorry bankers as the Mirror states:

“Our investigation found that of the 498 Tory MPs and peers 134 have been or are employed in the financial sector, this includes 70 of the party’s 305 MPs. Among the 193 Conservative peers, more than a third work or have worked in finance or banking. The Tories also stand accused of introducing laws that give a full tax exemption for British companies’ tax haven branches and letting them get away with an 8% tax rate for profits diverted to havens through internal financing. Altogether there are more Tory MPs who have been on the banks’ payroll than the total number of Lib Dem politicians. Labour MP Tristram Hunt said: “The Conservative Party is as much as ever the preserve of a small elite of professions of which financial services is by far the largest.”

Among the Cabinet members with links to the City are Pay-master General Francis Maude, who has worked for Solomon Bros and Morgan Stanley; Leader of the House of Lords, Lord Strathclyde who was chair of Trafalgar Capital Management from 2001-10; Cabinet Office minister Oliver Letwin, who worked for NM Rothschild & Son from 1986-2009; International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell, who worked for Lazard Bros from 1979-2009; and Commons Leader Sir George Young, who worked for the Samuel Hill merchant bank.

Eleven Tory MPs and peers have worked for Barclays, including Richard Bacon MP, Jesse Norman MP, former Chancellor Lord Lawson, Earl Howe and Andrea Leadsom MP. A further eight Conservatives have been at Rothschild, including John Redwood MP, Mark Garnier MP, former Chancellor Lord Lamont and Jacob Rees-Mogg MP.

And four worked for Lehman Bros, the company whose collapse sparked the financial crisis.”

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/features/2011/01/10/conservative-party-links-to-fat-cat-bankers-revealed-by-daily-mirror-investigation-115875-22838080/

So there you have it a great year so far for a corrupt regime filling its own pockets and setting themselves up for a nice chief executive / consultant job in the finance sector.

See that our ex prime minister sorry war criminal Tony Blair has a nice cushy job at JP Morgan  (only £5 million a year, must e a hard life) who were instrumental in the financial crisis and are currently destroying the world with their financial terrorism.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7186975.stm

Continue ReadingA good year for the Rich and it’s only February