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Well atleast it's fair.Babz wrote:ALL foreigners arriving in Britain will face a fee of up to thousands of pounds to pay for their healthcare.
The levy will be mandatory for everyone except tourists for any stay longer than six months in a new Government plan.
It will be paid upfront, before migrants know whether they will need any treatment and will be imposed even if they have private health insurance, The Sun can reveal.
Wow. I had heard that the NHS was in the red with unpaid NHS bills to foreigners. But that's a lot of money.Babz wrote: The scheme — which hopes to recoup the £200million a year the NHS currently pays treating non-Brits — will be unveiled by Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt tomorrow.
*shrug* If we are paying taxes into the system... extremely high taxes I might add... then we have already 'paid' for our treatment. I'm damned certain the share of my tax money that has gone into the NHS has far more than paid for the birth of my two children and their subsequent vaccinations. Even Britons should realize that their health care system isn't 'free'. There is no such thing as a free lunch. We all pay for it somehow.Babz wrote: A senior source told The Sun: “The pressures on the health service are already huge with our aging population, so we need to start relieving the burden.
“A migrant flat fee re-introduces the important contributory principle. Why should foreigners get treatment for free, while British citizens pay for theirs through their taxes?”
Well you have to try to find a reasonable balance between having too many people overall, and where you can best cut that back a bit. Legal immigration is an obvious place to get started. There has to be pain somewhere. I can think of no way to do this without somebody suffering because of it. Nobody has ever said it is going to be easy.Babz wrote: Ministers there insist it could hit investment and talent coming in to the country by making it too expensive for many — as well as slashing colleges’ and universities’ potential income.
Is this the £3000 thing? Or is this something on top of that?Babz wrote: The levy — which already exists in some nations such as Australia — will appear in the government’s flagship Immigration Bill in the autumn.
Babz wrote: The levy — which already exists in some nations such as Australia — will appear in the government’s flagship Immigration Bill in the autumn.
Something on top of it...Is this the £3000 thing? Or is this something on top of that?
NOT JUST THE SUN....THE DAILY MAIL HAS IT AS WELL!..Casa wrote:Bear in mind that this has been printed in The Sun newspaper.
I don't think that's what is being proposed. GPs should give treatment as normal. The assumption would be made that if the patient were someone who would be mandated to pay before using the NHS, that this payment would have been made well before they ever got in front of a GP. A GP/Nurse shouldn't have to even consider the matter.RCGP chairman Clare Gerada wrote: GPs must not become a new 'border agency' in policing access to the NHS. GPs have a duty of care to all people seeking healthcare and should not be expected to turn people away when they are at their most vulnerable.
Are you sure it won't rise to a thousand in 3-4 years' time?thebionicredneck2003 wrote:If it is £200 and not thousands of pounds, I think it is reasonable to pay that amount for a year to use the NHS.
Hopefully, this would apply to everyone and not a subset of foreigners like they are proposing for the bond for high risk countries.
And here is the part where I'm having a bit of a disconnect. If you are working in the UK legally, you are automatically paying into the NHS. The same is true if you are a student who is also working. Either these ministers are under the false impression that the NHS truly is 'free' for citizens but miraculously suddenly has actual costs when a foreigner is involved, or they believe that foreign workers are paying into the NHS significantly less than they are costing the NHS (something I would question earnestly and insist on a comparison to citizens payments-in/costs). I can understand the charge for non-working students and other non-working immigrants. But anybody who starts working in the UK legally, starts paying for the NHS, whether they know it, like it, use it or not.Babz wrote:Foreigners will be charged around £200-a-year towards the cost of healthcare in a bid to tackle so-called health tourism.
Ministers will outline plans to introduce the charge for foreign workers....
If they want to start charging me a yearly NHS fee, no problem. I just want a refund on all the taxes I've paid into the NHS, minus the charge for my children's birth's/vaccinations (although one was born a citizen... so she may not count....). Seems fair enough to me and I'll come out so far ahead that I can probably just stuff my tax refund into a savings account and pay the yearly NHS fee, no matter how much it is, out of the interest earned.GrahamD85 wrote:It's unclear who, if this comes in, this will affect - will it just be students or will those with permanent residency/ILR and jobs have to cough up too?
From the document, there will be some concessions. For example, people who use Private Care.This seems incredibly unfair. My family already paid in excess of £70,000 pounds last year, we paid £3500 to renew our Tier 1 visas, yet we still have to pay additional funds to access a service we have not used (we have used Private GPs and Consultants).
I don't see how they can legally impose this on top of income tax and NI.
As long as my 'opting out' means that I don't pay one pence, not in taxes, not in fees, nothing, for health care that I don't have access to, I'm fine with that. I'll take that money saved and buy my own insurance. I don't know what you meant with 'our insurance', but it is a trivial Google search to find insurance that covers emergency care here in the UK.dandm wrote:I have read the document and there is a proposal that certain visa classes may opt out and use private care, but if you do so you will also be liable for the costs of any emergency care, which I don't think our insurance covers.
This is tough, but you can still find insurance (considerably more work than a Google search) even in these cases. It will be expensive ofcourse, if it's allowed for the particular case and conditions. Otherwise, it will come out of your pocket, which sucks and leaves a permanently bad feeling with immigrants, but so be it.dandm wrote:Furthermore, no insurance policy here covers pre-existing conditions or chronic conditions.
I'll 'celebrate' if that opting out means I don't pay the taxes to NHS, and get to use that non-paid tax money as I see fit to take care of my health coverage.dandm wrote: if you don't have access to social security or health care you don't pay national insurance. We are paying for something we cannot access. But go ahead and celebrate the fact you might be able to opt-out.
Well it depends how high the levy is. If it's towards the low end of what is mooted then it will remain cheaper to pay the NHS levy than take out private health insurance. Most insurance policies do not cover GP visits, and if this goes ahead I don't think the levy will cover NHS GPs either. So either way you'll be paying for insurance or levy + GP fees.ouflak1 wrote:I'll 'celebrate' if that opting out means I don't pay the taxes to NHS, and get to use that non-paid tax money as I see fit to take care of my health coverage.dandm wrote: if you don't have access to social security or health care you don't pay national insurance. We are paying for something we cannot access. But go ahead and celebrate the fact you might be able to opt-out.