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by origin_path
1394 days ago
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Here's the post upthread I mean: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32540740 "I think your use of massively carries an implication to the reader that funding has increased above and beyond maintenance levels" The word massive here just means a massive amount of money relative to other levels of government spending changes. From 2010-2020 most govt departments got budgets that went down (austerity), but the NHS was excluded and its funding continued to increase. The amount of money it got is truly massive even on the scale of government. Trying to talk about "real terms" or "maintenance levels" with something like the NHS is impossible because demand for healthcare constantly increases even with a stable population demographic (some speculate that healthcare demand is actually infinite), as does demand for increased wages. History has shown that there is simply no level of funding increase that the NHS's supporters would ever consider sufficient because they can always claim that the system is strained, could use more people, better paid people, the latest treatments etc. So there's no fixed level that can be identified as maintenance, as one person's maintenance is another's underfunding, which is why all claims about underfunding are impossible to argue with - the statement is literally meaningless. Related problem: enormous sums of money get allocated to it at a time when every other service gets cuts, explicitly earmarked for upgrades to capacity or buildings and it all gets immediately spent on pay rises in blatant defiance of direct government instructions. So service capacity doesn't change at all but govt can't do anything because too many voters worship the NHS and assume it's perfect except for lack of money. |
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