H4
MAJORITY REPORT.
the £250 limit applies to non-manual workers : for the manual
workers there is no limit whatever. But so far as medical benefit
is concerned, Insurance Committees are empowered to prescribe
an income limit applicable to all insured persons for whose
medical benefit they are responsible. Where such an income
limit is prescribed in any area, persons above that limit must
make their own arrangements for receiving medical benefit,
receiving the appropriate payment from the Committee’s Medical
Benefit Fund in aid of their own expenditure. We are not aware
that any Committees have exercised this power, so that a well
paid manual worker would, under the present system, receive
medical benefit on the capitation system and thus be quite free
of any means test.
133. Another restriction of a similar type is to be found in the
requirement that a voluntary contributor with over £250 a year
is not entitled to medical benefit at all, either under the capita-
tion system or under that known as ** own arrangements,”’ and
pays a reduced contribution accordingly. Whether this
restriction is effectively administered we do not know, but in
any case voluntary contributors form a very small class. This
provision—although it then related to a lower income limit—
was inserted in the Act of 1913 to meet the objections entertained
by the Medical Profession agamst extension of the sphere of
contract practice to persons who, though initially within insur-
able limits, might later pass beyond the range of income for
which voluntary insurance was, in their view, designed. Tt may
suffice to accord mention, in passing, to the somewhat similar
provision governing the medical benefit of exempt persons.
134. These restrictions are significant as embodying in a very
definite form the means test, even in a system which is in part—
and so far as the voluntary contributor is concerned in a very
large part—maintained by the contributions of the beneficiaries.
135. The medical service provided by the Poor Law authorities
is an extreme form of the application of the means test. Closely
akin is the medical treatment provided by the Education Authe.
rities for school children though medical inspection is provided
for all, just as elementary education itself is, irrespective of
means. The treatment of physical defects and diseases is subject
to strict inquiry into means and to proved inability of the parents
to provide it themselves.
136. As exemplifying the opposite principle we may take the
whole group of services which deal with what is known as
"public health,” e.g., sanitation, provision for dealing with
infectious diseases, venereal disease and tuberculosis and the
Port sanitary service. The cost of these services is defrayed
out of rates and taxes and no consideration in any form is
given to the means of those most directly affected. The