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Report of the Royal Commission on National Health Insurance

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fullscreen: Report of the Royal Commission on National Health Insurance

Monograph

Identifikator:
1740277147
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-132094
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Report of the Royal Commission on National Health Insurance
Place of publication:
London
Publisher:
Stationery Office
Year of publication:
1926
Scope:
XII, 394 S.
Digitisation:
2020
Collection:
Economics Books
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Chapter VII. The financial resources of health insurance scheme
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Report of the Royal Commission on National Health Insurance
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Chapter I. Introduction
  • Chapter II. The scheme of national health insurance
  • Chapter III. The general attitude to the health insurance scheme
  • Chapter IV. The related schemes of social welfare
  • Chapter V. The development of the health services
  • Chapter VI. The financial burden of the existing social services
  • Chapter VII. The financial resources of health insurance scheme
  • Chapter VIII. The approved society system
  • Chapter IX. Inequalities of benefit in different approved societies
  • Chapter X. Proposals for extending medical benefit
  • Chapter XI. Proposal for dependants' allowances
  • Chapter XII. Consideration of certain major problems
  • Chapter XIII. Miscellaneous questions
  • Chapter XIV. Summary of conclusions and recommendations
  • Reservation by Sir Andrew Duncan and Professor Alexander Gray
  • Minority report

Full text

MAJORITY REPORT. 
CHAPTER VII. 
THE FINANCIAL RESOURCES OF THE HEALTH 
INSURANCE SCHEME. 
154. One of the most important points confronting us in the 
course of our investigations relates to the question whether the 
whole of the present financial resources of the National Health 
Insurance system are in fact required to provide for the existing 
benefits and the related cost of administration, or whether, as 
has been urged from some quarters and notably by the National 
Confederation of Employers’ Organisations, there is an appreci- 
able margin which might be made available for other purposes. 
As we have seen in the preceding chapter, the Employers’ 
Confederation advocate very forcibly a substantial reduction in 
the rates of contribution. On the other hand, many responsible 
witnesses press for extensions of benefit in various directions. 
Before we proceed to examine this important question of the 
margin, it will be helpful to give a brief account of the financial 
structure of the Scheme. 
THE FINANCIAL STRUCTURE. 
155. This need be attempted only in the broadest outline, as a 
detailed description of the financial machinery and of the 
numerous accounts relating to National Health Insurance is given 
in Section D of Appendix I to our Minutes of Evidence. That 
statement has been supplemented by oral examination (Q. 2127 to 
2543) which revealed nothing of a substantial nature lending itself 
to adverse criticism. The financial machinery is undoubtedly 
elaborate in character and thus may offer difficulty to society 
officials untrained in accounting problems. But we are told that 
the actual work is not so complex as would appear on the surface 
(Strohmenger, Q. 2448), and that the Department strives to 
effect all possible simplification. In our opinion the arrange- 
ments are well devised and in general the machinery appears 
to work smoothly and effectively. 
156. The revenue of the Scheme is derived from contributions 
and State grants. The contributions are in the main paid by 
affixing Health Insurance stamps to cards which have a currency 
of six months. For this purpose about £500,000 worth of stamps 
on the average are purchased week by week, by employers 
at Post Offices. The value of the stamps sold amounted in the 
year 1924 to some £27,000,000, and since the beginning of the 
Scheme in 1912 to the end of 1924 the receipt from sales of 
stamps amounted to upwards of £250,000,000. The Post Office 
pays over weekly the amount of these receipts to the respective 
National Health Insurance Funds. Employers on whom is 
imposed the responsibility for paying the full contribution affix
	        

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Report of the Royal Commission on National Health Insurance. Stationery Office, 1926.
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