Privatisation of the NHS will cost the average citizen more money. This statement can be supported by previous privatisations of other public services which include British Petroleum …show more content…
All of these are viable factors and should be considered. One of these counter arguments would be the money freed up for the Government by this sale could be used on other projects. If this happens then the NHS is one less burden to the government and the sudden influx of money could go to other important projects. This is a valid point but the NHS IS the most important project. Providing free healthcare to the needy and the less fortunate should be the Government's top priority. In addition, this extra money will most likely go towards maintaining the NHS (as previous privatisations have led to similar cases for example British Railways costing the government a fortune to keep …show more content…
It is too risky, it only benefits the selected few and public priority drops to second place whilst the shareholders come first. A previous example of privatisation miss-hap was The Royal Mail's privatisation. This was successful at first but soon went into decline with staff Wages decreasing and less time off. This still went through even when 96% of the employees voted against this. On the contrary the general public suffered heavily due to Royal Mail going private with costs going up and delivery times going up also. Looking into these previous private investments can surely be an indication of what will happen if the NHS goes through with