Abstract :
One of the few predictions about the National Health Service (NHS) in the
approaching fiscal ice age that can be made with reasonable certainty is that the
long-simmering debate about rationing will boil up more fiercely than ever before.
Internationally the NHS’s ability to manage scarce resources has frequently been
held up either as a shining exemplar or as a dire warning, not least in the political
struggles over healthcare reform in the United States. But, of course, it is neither.
The British experience can best be seen as a case study of the dilemmas and
difficulties involved in managing the allocation of scarce resources. And it is
precisely because the dilemmas and difficulties remain unresolved – and perhaps
can never yield a final resolution – that they have prompted public and academic
arguments over the decades: arguments that will flare up ever more fiercely as
resource constraints bite in coming years. What follows, therefore, is a selective
discussion of issues that are likely to feature in the debate.