Recently I
got embroiled in a discussion, on social media about NHS staff and pay rises.
Well,
I was discussing, others were simply yelling emotion-driven abuse.
You may not be aware of this but there seem to be people out there who genuinely believe the following things:
a) that if you work in the NHS you are a better person than those who don't;
b) that those of us who don't work in the NHS would not be prepared to do what they do; we’d be too scared or it would be too much like hard work;
c) that, far from being equal, there are different classes of citizen in our country. There are those who work in the NHS (and some might be good enough to add Police, Fire & Ambulance Service as well), then there are other Public sector workers and finally, at the bottom of the worthiness list, all those that work in the Private sector.
I KID YOU NOT, THERE ARE PEOPLE WHO ACTUALLY THINK THIS!
This is a quite remarkable, dangerous & worrying way to
think.
Firstly,
let’s remember how money flows in terms of the Public and Private sectors. Put
simply, the Private sector generates taxation via corporation tax, worker income
tax, and employer & employee National Insurance.
These revenues go to the Government. The Government uses this money to pay for
the Public sector, including the salaries of all those that work in it.
Yes, I know that all of those Public sector workers pay tax & NI, but as
the wages they get has come from the Private sector (via the Government), any
tax they pay is merely returning a proportion of that back. It’s not NEW tax
revenue.
The point
is that the Public sector does not create wealth, rather it consumes the wealth
generated by the Private sector & distributed by the Government.
Now this
isn't a problem as long as we all remember that without the Private sector
being successful (which is not just successful companies paying taxation but
unemployment being low such that all the Private sector workers are paying tax
not receiving benefits), there would be no money to pay the NHS staff or the Fire
Service, the Police service or the Ambulance service or the people that come
and take away your rubbish every week etc, etc.
Once we allow ourselves to think of any part of the Public sector as uncriticisable, like a cult/religion, we have lost our objectivity.
We all need to agree that we will not pursue any idea that certain people doing
certain jobs or working in certain parts of our society are more deserving,
better people, than others.
That’s divisive, which we have enough of already at
the moment!
Importantly,
and I can only speak for myself here, I would have been perfectly happy to work
in the NHS if that’s the way my life had gone.
Indeed my mother, an aunt, and
several cousins did/do work in the NHS.
The risks of being on the front-line of patient care would probably not even
have occurred to me.
Like joining the armed services, it’s a risk you are aware of and accept when
you choose that career.
Anyway, I suspect that people choose to work in the NHS for positive reasons
and are not constantly weighing-up any dangers there may be over and above other
jobs.
Also, when you look at the groups most vulnerable, not to catching CV19, but to being really badly affected by it, very few will be working in the NHS.
By far the
most vulnerable group, the over 70s, are retired, and those with long-term
existing susceptible conditions are likewise less likely to be working in the
NHS, and if they are, they should have been self-isolating.
So, while
CV19 patient doctors & nurses in the NHS may be of greater risk of catching
CV19, they were, in reality, at no greater risk of serious illness or dying
from CV19 than anyone else in the low-risk groups.
Of course I feel very sorry for the
exceptions but they are such a small number compared to the total that they
prove the rule.
Remember
also that only a certain proportion of NHS staff come into direct contact with
CV19 patients; under half, by no means ALL NHS staff as is implied by many.
Additionally,
not only is it impossible for everybody outside the Public sector to work
within it, but neither is it desirable that they should; remember where the
money comes from.
Without the Private
sector there would be no NHS.
And it
certainly isn’t the case that everyone should WANT to work in the Public sector
in some bizarre attempt at symbolising what a ‘good’ person they are, which
really appears to be the view of some strange people on social media.
So, while I
am sure that we are all very grateful to those who do work in the NHS, that
gratitude simply cannot overflow into cult status, hero worship & special
treatment.
When so many
people in the Private sector have, and over the next 12 months even more will, lose
their jobs; and when even more will receive no pay rise of any kind, it seems
rather strange to be singling out people that work in the NHS as if they are
the only people who have had a difficult time in the last 12 months. They are
not; not by a long chalk.
What I
suspect is that a lot of the fuss and noise around wanting to treat the NHS
staff better than everybody else, is generated by the usual suspects: certain
politicians, certain parts of the media, trade unions, those who generally
favour the Public sector over the Private sector, and those who just never
think about where the money comes from to give Public sector workers pay
increases.
I was going
to say that I wonder, should there be an anonymous poll of NHS staff, how many
of them would be happy to claim that they are better people and more deserving
than their fellow citizens.
However, I am confident that the vast majority of people working within the NHS
would NOT describe themselves in such an arrogant narcissistic and entitled way.
I agree with them.
They do a great job; they do a very necessary job, and we are grateful.
But they do benefit from almost 100% job security which is worth a lot at the
moment, and I for one am not SO grateful that I'm prepared to pretend that they
are literally better people and more deserving of special treatment than the
rest of us.
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