The Socialist

The Socialist 31 March 2010

We Will Not Pay

We will not pay!

Help fund Socialist Party campaigns

Stop the cuts, build a socialist alternative


PCS: Striking against government attacks

PCS budget day strike: Support grows across country


BA cabin crew strike: 'We shall not be moved'

Fight the decimation of London tube jobs

Network Rail dispute: RMT signalworker speaks to The Socialist

Workplace news in brief


NUT conference: fight cuts and excessive workload

Socialist elected to NUT executive


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition Standing against cuts and privatisation


Yorkshire on the campaign trail

Developing a strategy to defeat the far-right

Waltham Forest: on march against redundancies

Cameron shows Tories still anti-gay

Council cuts: Grim Reaper moving to Surrey

Lewisham councillors' record

News in brief


Terror returns to Moscow For workers' unity against terror, repression, racism and capitalism

Eurozone crisis: Hanging together or hanging separately


Future Jobs scam: attacks on young unemployed

Southampton University protest

May Day march in Hull: Rebuilding traditions of struggle


When We Were Miners

 
 
Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/618/9104

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 31 March 2010   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

News in brief

Outdoing Thatcher

FOR THOSE who continue to believe that Labour is the "lesser evil" to vote for in May's general election then Alistair Darling's post-budget comment should have them holding their heads in their hands in disbelief.

When asked if the cuts in public spending outlined in the budget would be bigger than under Margaret Thatcher's premiership, Darling replied: "They will be deeper and tougher... "

And this was no misquote. Treasury minister Liam Byrne, when quizzed later on BBC's Question Time on whether Labour's cuts in services will be "tougher and deeper", replied: "Yes they will."

PFI record

ONE FIGURE tucked away in chancellor Alistair Darling's budget was the escalating cost of private finance initiative (PFI) contracts - the government favoured method of paying for hospitals, schools, etc.

PFIs have now reached a record £210 billion in total. Roughly twice the annual budget of the National Health Service (NHS).

PFI schemes, which can last for 25 years or more, are a licence to print money for private consortiums that are guaranteed a fat profit.

However, the cost of financing these schemes is bleeding institutions like the NHS dry. Building a hospital through a PFI is like buying a house using a high interest rate credit card instead of a low interest mortgage.

As a result many health trusts have gone into 'deficit' and are obliged to cut spending on services.

This is one reason why critical care services are being cut back in many hospitals.

PFI closure

PFI IS at the heart of a plan to axe critical care and maternity services at King George's Hospital in Ilford, east London.

The building of Queen's Hospital in neighbouring Romford through a PFI scheme has pushed the area health trust into a large financial deficit.

Under the management of the internal 'health market' these deficits are typically reduced using money from NHS budgets, leading to cuts in services.

With the general election looming large and with widespread local community opposition, health minister Mike O'Brien has deferred a decision to close King George's A&E.

The fate of the general hospital will now be passed to an 'independent reconfiguration panel'.

Campaigners against the downgrading of the hospital should remain vigilant as an earlier attempt to close its A&E department in 2008 was deferred too, only for regional health bosses to revive the cuts plan this year.

Bad deal

LAST NOVEMBER, Youth Fight for Jobs attacked the government for secretly planning to make £350 million cuts in youth training schemes in 2011-11.

Now the government is making a further £500 million cut to its flagship long term unemployment scheme - the Flexible New Deal (phase two) programme.

The government's justification is the 'unexpectedly low levels of long-term unemployment' - a surprising claim given its own figure, published in March, which shows that long-term unemployment rose by 61,000 to 687,000.


In this issue

We will not pay!

Help fund Socialist Party campaigns

Stop the cuts, build a socialist alternative


PCS strike action

PCS: Striking against government attacks

PCS budget day strike: Support grows across country


Transport strikes

BA cabin crew strike: 'We shall not be moved'

Fight the decimation of London tube jobs

Network Rail dispute: RMT signalworker speaks to The Socialist

Workplace news in brief


NUT conference

NUT conference: fight cuts and excessive workload

Socialist elected to NUT executive


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition

Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition Standing against cuts and privatisation


Socialist Party news and analysis

Yorkshire on the campaign trail

Developing a strategy to defeat the far-right

Waltham Forest: on march against redundancies

Cameron shows Tories still anti-gay

Council cuts: Grim Reaper moving to Surrey

Lewisham councillors' record

News in brief


International socialist news and analysis

Terror returns to Moscow For workers' unity against terror, repression, racism and capitalism

Eurozone crisis: Hanging together or hanging separately


Youth

Future Jobs scam: attacks on young unemployed

Southampton University protest

May Day march in Hull: Rebuilding traditions of struggle


Socialist Party review

When We Were Miners


 

Home   |   The Socialist 31 March 2010   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

PFI:

triangle'Save Heatherwood Hospital' campaign yielding results

triangleStroud: Labour lets NHS down again

trianglePrivate hands off our NHS!

triangleSave the NHS!

trianglePontefract hospital: Army withdrawn - now kick out PFI!

triangleLansley closes another hospital A&E department

Health:

triangleHospital jobs scandal - Action now to save the NHS!

triangleIt's our NHS - Let's fight for it!

triangleHealth services at risk in Cardiff and Vale

triangleUnison leadership 'woefully inadequate' in face of cuts

Hospital:

triangleNHS GMB members vote No to pensions deal

triangleWest London: Charing Cross hospital - Save A&E demo

triangleExposed: the dirty world of NHS privatisation

Budget:

triangleFor councils that fight the cuts!

triangleBudget for the 1% must be fought

triangleBudget 2012: reject regional pay