Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Fact check: Did ‘austerity’ kill 120,000 people?
Fact check: Did ‘austerity’ kill 120,000 people?
Dec 10, 2025 1:01 PM

Did stingy UK mit “economic murder” by slashing NHS funding? A clip of a self-described Communist accusing the government of killing 120,000 people has gone viral, but the facts do not bear out her contention.

Ash Sarkar, who scored a glowing profile inTeen Vogueafter calling herself “literally a Communist,” made ment on the BBC programQuestion Time:

Austerity was not just a bloodless balancing of the books it was paid for with people’s lives, 120,000 people. The reason why I’m so angry and the reason why I think that gentleman [a political activist who confronted Prime Minister Boris Johnson in an NHS hospital] yesterday was so angry is because those of us who rely on public services – whether it’s the NHS, whether it’s the education system, whether it’s child protection or whether it’s, you know, benefits – have had to endure suffering for a decade, while we’ve heard the same line repeated by Tory MPs about having to end the deficit and how tough choices there are to be made. You didn’t have to pay for those choices the way ordinary people did.

Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn tweeted the video clip, adding, “You can’t disagree with this.”

You can’t disagree with this.#BBCQT /WKB8kmu4C3

— Jeremy Corbyn (@jeremycorbyn) September 19, 2019

Yet fact-checkers can, and have, disagreed that the poor es associated with the NHS result from its consuming too few government resources.

There are at least three problems with this assertion.

Problem #1: The report does not assert 120,000 deaths due to austerity

The estimated 120,000 death es from a 2017reportpublished by University College London. “It is not an exaggeration to call it economic murder,”saidcontributor Lawrence King.

The report itself is more modest – and, as one British figure said, it has much to be modest about.

Researchers noticed that, if previous health trends had continued, 45,000 fewer people would have died from 2010 to 2014. They extrapolated this to 120,000 by 2017, since government figures were not yet available.

“Our findings likely capture association rather than causation,” its authors admit. “We were unable to analyse specific causes of death as es because there were differences in how causes of death in 2001–2010 and 2010 onwards were coded.”

Ascribing these deaths “to health and social care spending is speculative,”saidDr. Martin Roland, professor emeritus of health research services at the University of Cambridge. Roland noted that reducing nursing staff impacts the number of deaths in care homes but not hospitals, yet the report does not break down NHS nursing cuts.

Another expert, Dr. Richard Fordham of the University of East Anglia, said the paper had a “plausible hypothesis” but “other explanations are available.”

Patients during this time frame may have suffered from “more end-stage, longer-term illnesses”; “succumbed to different or newdiseases (e.g., MRSA, cirrhosis etc.); or had greater multiple morbidities (asthma plus diabetes pluscancer, etc.) than similarcohorts of the same age before them.”

An influenza epidemic swept at least five other European nations during this period, according to Adam Steventon, Director of Data Analytics at the Health Foundation.

Blaming the free market backfires on the study, because the “privatization of nursing homes took place largely in this period,” Fordham added. This should have freed up public funds that “could have beenspent elsewhere in the social care system(possibly on other services for the elderly).”

“One should treat their conclusions with somecaution,” he said.

FullFactandChannel 4fact-checked the report and came to similar conclusions.

Problem #2: UK ‘austerity’ is overstated

Per capita medical spending slowed – but still increased – during this time. Government spending washigherunder Conservative Theresa May than Labourite Tony Blair in total dollars, inflation-adjusted dollars, and percentage of GDP. “What austerity?”askedLiam Halligan in theTelegraph. “Austerity still remains more of a goal than an actual reality,” wrote Allister Heath atCity AM.

Problem #3: The NHS has claimed tens of thousands of cancer patients’ lives

Sarkar’s statement also overlooks the opportunity cost of maintaining the UK’s NHS, which studies show has a lower survival rate of numerous diseases. “In the UK there may be up to 15,000 avoidable deaths from cancer every year in people over the age of 75 years,”The Lancetreported in July. “[B]etween 2003 and 2005, cancer mortality rates in the UK were 23% higher than in six western European countries among those aged 75–84 years and 31% higher than in the USA among people over the age of 85 years.” While cancer deaths dropped 16 percent in Western Europe, they fell only two percent in the UK.

The state-run NHS lags behind, not just nations without a single-payer system, but nations that have less hidebound national healthcare systems. “If the UK’s breast cancer, prostate cancer, lung cancer and bowel cancer patients were treated in the Netherlands rather than on the NHS, more than 9,000 lives would be saved every year,”wrote analyst Kristian Niemietz of the Institute of Economic Affairs. “If they were treated in Germany, more than 12,000 lives would be saved, and if they were treated in Belgium, more than 14,000 lives would be saved.” If the UK had a system like Israel – which isfar from a pure,free-market system – it would save 3,598 victims of breast cancer; 5,108 victims of prostate cancer; 6,465 victims of lung cancer; 5,838 victims of bowel cancer every year.

These reflect survival rates of cancer patients alone; they ignore deaths from other terminal illnesses.

John Calvin, healthcare, and prudence

In hisInstitutes, John Calvinwrotethat God “Who has fixed the boundaries of our life, at the same time entrusted us with the care of it … Now our duty is clear, namely, since the Lord mitted to us the defense of our life – to defend it … since He supplies remedies [medicines], not to neglect them.”

He upbraided those who believe human action has no role to play in predetermination. “The providence of God does not interpose simply; but, by employing means, assumes, as it were, a visible form,” Calvin wrote.

The Christian has a duty to make the best use of the medicines and remedies available to the human race. A less statist and bureaucratic NHS, more open to the free market, would save lives – and perhaps make an ideal marriage of prudence and providence.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
What Would Jesus Cut? Who’s Asking, the Pharisees?
The next skirmish over the country’s financial direction e in September as Congress tries to prepare for the federal government’s new fiscal year, which starts October 1st. The Christian Left has quoted the Bible quite freely during the budget battle, throwing around especially the “red letter” words of Christ in its campaign to protect all of the federal government’s poverty programs (even those so riddled with fraud that the White House wants to cut them). It seems bizarre, then, that...
Get the Acton Android App
The Acton Institute has released a mobile app for smart phones and tablets based on the Android operating system. The free app keeps users up to date with the latest PowerBlog mentaries, events and other goings on at the institute. Point your puter or smart phone to the Android Market. In the pipeline — the Acton iPhone app for Apple mobile devices. Stay tuned! ...
Standing after the Storm
The August issue of Southern Living magazine offers a very good story on the faith of Smithville Baptist pastor Wes White and munity of Smithville, Miss. Smithville was devastated by a tornado that wreaked havoc across the South in late April. Pastor White is quoted in the article as saying, “We have a hope beyond logic, beyond understanding. I believe our God is going to take our devastation and turn it into something beautiful.” The words from White echo Rev....
Debate: Capitalism vs Distributism
“More and more, I find Catholics dividing themselves into capitalist and distributist camps,” writes Bernardo Aparicio García, president of the Catholic journal Dappled Things. To help readers establish “a firm foundation” for thinking about economic questions, García opened up the pages of his journal to Robert T. Miller, for capitalism, and John C. Médaille, for distributism. The result is a lengthy exchange “On Truth and Trade: Economics and the Catholic Vision of the Good Life.” Miller is a professor of...
Distributists Ignore the Lessons of History
Distributism is not a new idea—it wasn’t conceived by G.K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc. As Belloc explains in The Servile State, their idea was a return to certain economic principles of medieval Europe—a guild system, wider ownership of the means of production, etc.—in order to right the injustices of capitalism. But distributism goes back further than that, to Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus in the second century B.C., and the theory’s proponents would do well to learn from the tragic failures...
The Folly of More Centralized Power
mentary this week addresses the importance of federalism and our fundamental founding principles in relation to the problems that plague the nation. There was once plenty mentary and finger pointing in regards to setting a new tone of political and civil discourse in the nation. However, the more the Washington power structure is threatened by those unsatisfied with where the leadership is taking us, the more those demanding a return to first principles will be splattered with, at times, revolting...
Flash Mobbing King’s Dream
My contribution to this week’s Acton News & Commentary: Flash Mobbing King’s Dream by Anthony B. Bradley Every black person apprehended for robbing stores in a flash mob should have their court hearing not in front of a judge but facing the 30-foot statute of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. at his Washington memorial site. Each thief should be asked, “What do you think Dr. King would say to you right now?” I was not angry when I initially saw...
Commerce and Counseling
My friend Joe Knippenberg notes some of my musings on the field of “philosophical counseling,” and in fact articulates some of the concerns I share about the content of such practice. I certainly didn’t mean to uncritically praise the new field as it might be currently practiced (I did say, “The actual value of philosophical counseling (or perhaps better yet, philosophical tutoring) might be debatable.”). There are, in fact, better and worse philosophers as there is better and worse philosophy,...
Proto-Marxists in Acts of the Apostles?
Commenting on Warren Buffet’s call to raise taxes on the “mega-rich,” North Carolina Minister Andrew Daugherty says this on Associated Baptist Press (HT: RealClearReligion): Unlike some of our political leaders and media pundits, the gospel does not make false distinctions between the “makers” and the “takers,” the deserving and the undeserving or the hard-working and the hardly-working. Instead, we are told that the first Christians had all things mon. They would sell their possessions and goods and distribute the proceeds...
The Church’s African, Middle Eastern and Asian Roots
The Brotherhood of St. Moses the Black, an Orthodox Christian organization that provides information about “ancient Christianity and its deep roots in Africa,” is holding a conference Aug. 26-28 in the Detroit area. In a story in the Observer & Eccentric newspaper about the ing conference, a reporter interviewed a woman by the name of Sharon Gomulka who had visited an Orthodox Church several years ago on the feast day of St. Moses the Black (or sometimes called The Ethiopian)....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved