1/90
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced |
---|
No study sessions yet.
How many people did the 1911 Insurance scheme cover?
10% of the male popuation
Welfare provision was minimal in the interwar period, however it was enough to prevent what?
Turning to extremist parties e.g Russia in 1917, Germany in 1933
When/ What was the Unemployment Act?
1920 - long term solution to 1911 Act. ^ Nat insurance to cover 11.4mil workers 1921 and state funded dole (no means test)
How did the 1920s Unemployment Act fail?
2/3 of workers were eligible for it → drained funding
Gov paying lots to avoid strike
Led to introducing means test → 3mil claims rejected by 1930
When/What was the National Economy Act?
1931 - Means tests disqualified ‘short time’ workers, benefits lasted 6 months then reapply.
What/When was The Unemployment Act of the 1930s?
1934 - Reversed cuts in benefits for short term unemp. Made the Unemp Assistance Board
When/What was the Widows, Orphans and Old Age Contributory Pensions Act? How was it funded
1925 - 10 shillings a week for groups mentioned in the Act’s name
Funded by compulsory donations → not liked by lab
Why did infants mortality decr during the war?
Subsidised fuels and milk for mothers.
When did rationing begin? What was first rationed?
1940 - bacon, sugar, bread
What fraction of pop saw their living standard ^ during WW2?
1/3
When was the first evacuations? How many were evacuated?
1939 - 1.5 mil evacuated
What party was Beveridge part of?
Liberals
When was the Beveridge report? What 5 evils did Beveridge want to tackle in his report? What did he want it to be viewed?
1942 - Want, Disease, Idleness, Ignorance, Squalor
To be viewed as a safety net of basic needs
How was the Beveridge Report recieved?
Popular - all parties adopted it in some way after the war. Although did carry view that it was women’s job to ‘continue the human race’
What/When was the Family Allowances Act?
1945 - 25p a week per child (except the eldest) given straight to the mother
When/ what was the National Insurance Act?
1946
25p from all workers wages
unemp and sickness Benefits to all workers
state pension to all men 65+ and women 60+
Focus on universality
What was the flaw of the 1945 National Insurance Act?
Rich and poor paid same amount → higher % from low income
When/What was the Industrial Injuries Act? Why did it come into place?
1946 - Compensation after workplace incidents
40s average of 2,500 workplace deaths a year
When/what was the National Assistance Act?
1948 - Welfare to those not covered by insurance
Macmillan wanted both private enterprise and social welfare from gov action. He advocates this in his book called …
The Middle Way
The NHS was viewed as the ‘J… … … C…’. Conservative Minister of Health M… wanted to make more hospitals.
‘Jewel in the Crown’
Ian Macloed
When did Rationing end?
1954
What was the budget deficit when Wilson came into government?
£800 mill - hidden by previous con chancellor Maudling
Why did the cost of Welfare become unpopular under the first Wilson Government?
Wilson made promises to ^ welfare spending
Advisor told him to cut welfare spending to save eco (after being left £800 mil deficit)
Wilson refused so ^ taxes to support welfare → resentment
1966 social welfare ^ to 5% GDP
When/What was the conservative National Insurances Act of the 70s?
1970 - attendance allowance for those who needed long-term care
Pension rights to 100,000 more people
^ child allowance for mothers
and more
Give 3 counter points of right-wing challenging radical Keith Joseph in the 70s.
Individual Freedom - state limited individual freedom → no state intervention in welfare
Taxes - State would just take ^ taxes → less freedom
Efficiency - Private businesses are more efficient
Inflation - welfare spending requires borrowing
Dependency Culture
How did the 1976 IMF loan impact Welfare?
Gov got an IMF load of £4 bil - but to do that had to prove it could pay it back by making cuts of £2.5 bil.
How were attitudes changing to welfare spending in the 70?
Post war collectivist thinking changed to a more aspiration generation and to do this they would want less taxation → MT’s appeal
Why was there fear of hospitals and healthcare specifically in wc in 1918?
Link with Victorian poor laws and workhouses still prevelant
Name some medical advancements made in the interwar period
Lung and brain surgery, blood transfusions
What were the differing opinions on governments role in healthcare between the Fabian Society, Labour Party and the BMA?
Fabian - State-planned, centralised healthcare
Labour - Free healthcare
BMA - regional healthcare but co-ordinated by gov
Why were untrained midwives used by the wc sometimes safer than the uc doctors?
Dr wanted to see as many patients as possible to get more £ → rushing procedures and spreading disease
When/What was the Tuberculosis Act? What effect did it have?
1921 - provisions of TB sanatoria compulsory for local authorities with TB being one of biggest killers
Cases of TB fell every year 1920-28
When/What was the Local Government Act? What was the impact of PAC’s?
1929 - Local authorities now had power
could convert poor law hospitals in public ones
responsibility for other areas e.g child welfare, venereal diseases
Local authorities to set up PACs
PAC’s rejected 400,000 claims of means tests after 1931 crisis year
1930 what fraction of childhood deaths were from diptheria?
1/3
What was Tredegar?
Town of unemp and overcrowding
Medical Aid scheme run by townspeople very successful. Used a poundage system to create profit towards dentistry, physiotherapy etc
Birthplace of Bevan
Give evidence to support the idea of ‘Two Englands’ in 1930s. (PROMPT: what was the difference in infant mortality?)
Clyde, South Wales, North East, N Ireland
Infant Mortality 11.4% in
Jarrow70% unemp in Jarrow (N. East)
1936 Rowntree - 1/3 in poverty in York
Midlands, London, South East
Infant mortality 4.2% in home counties
Mc smaller families → ^ disposable income → ^ car ownership (1 mil cars sold 1930)
What was the school medical inspection service?
Monitored health of poorest children with free treatment if needed. Rickets commonly found
What was Peckham? How many families joined after 2 years? What were its findings on women?
Health centre focusing on preventative treatment with many leisure facilities and an annual health check up
650 families
Women - ^ blood pressure, anaemia. Only 7% of women were truly healthy
By how much (%) higher were wc maternal mortality rates than mc?
50%
What was the Emergency Medical Service?
First example of gov intervention in healthcare. Pooling of resources and expertise to provide medical assistance during the war
When/What was the National Health Service Act?
1946 - Comprehensive healthcare to all, free at point of delivery funded by direct taxation
Why did BMA refuse the idea of NHS initially? What compromise did Bevan make?
BMA thought it would decr status of dr and ability to earn
Compromise - allowed to meet with private patients still, Regional health board appointed (not elected) → mostly uc/mc
How was the NHS initially tripartite?
Hospital service, Primary Care, Community Service
How did Macmillan continue development of NHS with 1962 Hospital Plan?
90 new hospitals, 134 hospitals modernised/redesigned
What was the pattern of NHS spending over the 60s and 70s?
Constantly and consistently rising (even during cons premierships)
The M… report of 19… showed inequality in NHS spending. It showed:
…% of NHS funding spent of hospitals (not primary care)
Funding was r… and most of the 1962 Hospital Plan funding went to L.. hospitals
The Merrison report of 1979 showed inequality in NHS spending. It showed:
70% of NHS funding spent of hospitals (not primary care)
Funding was regional and most of the 1962 Hospital Plan funding went to London hospitals
What was the theory that suggested there was a disparity in healthcare between classes, whereby those that needed it most where getting the least help?
Inverse Care Law
What was ‘dandruff syndrome’?
The idea that people would go to the NHS for trivial issue → dependency culture (exactly what Bevan wanted to avoid).
What was the annual healthcare budget per head in wc areas vs mc areas?
£3.19 in wc area
£4.98 in mc area
How was the 1967 Abortion Act limited?
How many were done privately 1968-78?How much did it cost?
How many fatalities were there in the NHS 1968-78?
Needed 2 (often male) drs approval → abortions reflecting beliefs of the dr
1.5 mil done privately costing £200
86 fatalities on NHS
Argument that medicalisation of birth led to what?
How many women were given episiotomies?
Power given to the doctors not women
70-90% often without woman’s consent
Compare the Mental Health Act 1959 vs the Stigma that still prevaled
Mental Health Act:
‘Mentally Ill’ not ‘insane’
open door policy in daycare centres not overnight stays in hospitals
Drop-in care
Stigma
‘cruel and inhumane’ treatment at Ely Hospital → 25 enquiries into misconduct and abuse at psychiatric hospitals
How did the ‘pharmacological revolution’ impact NHS spending?
NHS spent 250% more on drugs in 1964 then 1951
What were 5 areas of advancement that → ^ NHS spending?
Drug demands
Advanced technology and staff needed for that
Ageing population - 7mil → 9 mil at retirement age (1951-71)
Major Surgery
Contraception
Explain the Thalidomide Crisis
Medical advancement could go wrong:
Drug developed in w. Germany for morning sickness →10,000 seriously deformed babies
Hadn’t been effectively tested
W Ger gov offered 320 mil DM compensation to victims
When/What was the Fisher Education Act?
1918
^ school leaving age 12→14
centralises education - central gov paying 60% of costs→ ^ teacher salaries
The H… report recommended 1) p… and s… schools split at 11 and 2) overall school leaving age should be raised to …. This report never came into effect though due to …
The Hadow report recommended 1) primary and secondary schools split at 11 and 2) overall school leaving age should be raised to 15. This report never came into effect though due to costs.
Education domain of mc. In 1939 what % of wc kids 13+ were still in school?
13%
How were grammar school limiting to wc?
Required fees. Although scholarships were available for academics children, many wc kids probably wouldn’t qualify for them. 1914 0.06^ wc kid accessed scholarships
Some free places were available but even these weren’t accessible (travel, uniform etc)
When/What was the Butler Education Act
1944- ^ leaving age to 15
Proposed tripartite system
Grammar Schools - to anyone who passed 11+ (especially in more wc areas to support academic route for wc kids)
Secondary Modern - lower mc and wc,
Technical Schools - to create technologically minded generation with modernising world
How did the Butler Act succeed? How did it fail?
Success:
Millions of wc and girls now have free compulsory education (having been excluded from it)
Enabled social change in 60s and 70s
Failure
11+ arguably worsened class division
75% to sec moderns
3% to tech schools and expensive to run.
What % of schools had been bombed in the Blitz?
20%
How did the baby boom effect the Butler Act?
Baby boom → need for ^ primary school → not enough funding to properly role out tripartite system effectively
When/where was the first comprehensive school opened?
1954 - Kidbrooke
What were the two major education reports in the late 50s/early 60s?
1959 - Crowther Report
1963 - Newsom Report
When/What was the Crowther report?
1959 - proposed ^ leaving age to 16 and developing post 16 edu e.g 6th-from colleges
When/What was the Newsom Report?
1963 - argued 50% of children had poor edu
What was the Circular 10/65? Who issued it?
The Labour Government’s attempt to end selective education with more comprehensives
Tony Crossland
Why was the 11+ accused of creating 2nd class citizens, leading to an ^ in comprehensives?
Grammar schools would teach O-levels and Sec moderns would teach CSEs (less valued → less chance for uni)
Comprehensives would offer both O-levels and CSEs
1970-74 the number of comps ^ from …%→ …%
Who oversaw this change?
30% → 62% (x2)
Margaret Thatcher (Edu Minister)
What was the outcome of 1976 Education Act?
Selection was still present but comps became the main form of schooling.
As a result of the P… report in 19…, ideas such as r… learning moved to c…-c… learning.
The report recommended:
a ban on … …
more freedom in classroom
not l… students
As a result of the Plowden report in 1967, ideas such as rote learning moved to child-centred learning.
The report recommended:
a ban on corporal punishment
more freedom in classroom
not lecturing students
Explain the case study of William Tyndale School
removed all rules → children doing whatever they wanted
parents withdrew their children
teachers putting socialist beliefs above teaching
→ widespread concern over progressive edu
William Tyndale was not the majority
What was the first major backlash to progressive education?
Black Papers 1969 - criticised decline in teacher authority (however didn’t want rote either)
What was the yellow book?
Result of report ordered by PM Callaghan showing decline in school discipline, school curricula not → productive roles in eco, gov and public had little say in goings on of schools
What element of Callaghan’s speach at Ruskin college → the National Curriculum in 1980s?
The debate over lack of gov control, centralised curriculum and methods of teaching.
Name 3 of the top public school?
Eton
Harrow
Rugby
Charter House
Winchester
In 1979 what % of Oxbridge places went to public school students?
64%
TRUE OR FALSE: in 1918 unis were becoming more accessible to women and mc
TRUE
What was a common route (for wc) into uni?
Government-funded teacher-training grants - student agreeing to do a postgrad in teacher training and a period of teaching after their degree
In the interwar period the gov didn’t interfere with unis much. what fraction of the fees did financial aid cover?
1/3
When did university become central to government policies?
1945
When/What was the Percy Report?
1945
classics should be challenged by ^ need for sciences in univeristy courses
Unis ^ after ^ students from Butler Act
When/What was the Barlow Report?
1946 - ^ gov spending on unis and ^ courses for sciences
The Robbins report wanted to ^ number of uni by …x by 1980.
5x
Give examples of modern ‘plate-glass’ unis
East Sussex
Canterbury
When did both Labs and Cons agreee welfare state should pay for uni tuition and student grants
1970
How many polytechnics were opened to focus on science and vocational subjects.
32
When did the Open University begin? What did it provide?
1971 - distance learning from home, giving anyone a chance to get higher education. (Heath considered closing it but didn’t to prevent backlash)
How many unis were there by 1971?
53