HC Deb 06 December 1971 vol 827 cc243-4W
Dame Patricia Hornsby-Smith

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if, in view of the shortage of various categories of qualified consultants in the National Health Service, he will review the procedure under which consultants are compulsorily retired at 65 years of age and thereafter re-employed on a sessional basis and lose part or all of their superannuation, according to their earnings, if re-employed in the National Health Service, yet do not do so if they work in private practice or abroad.

Sir K. Joseph

Hospital boards may, at their discretion, re-employ consultants who have reached age 65; my Department and the profession have, however, agreed that it is important that the promotion propects of younger practitioners should not be impaired. Consultants are subject to the rules that apply in one form or another throughout the public service for the abatement of pension on re-employment therein. The effect is to reduce their pensions only to the extent that, when added to re-employment earnings, they exceed earnings from the public service at the time of retirement. The underlying principle is that the purpose of superannuation is to provide a pension to help maintain the person after he has retired, and it has been a consistent policy for many years to regard the payment of remuneration from public funds in addition to a unabated pension beyond the limit described as not being justified when the recipient is still in public service employment for a substantial part of his time.

Mr. Michael Cocks

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services what was the total number of part-time consultants employed in the National Health Service for each of the years from 1948 to 1970.

Mr. Alison

The numbers of part-time medical and dental consultants with regular paid appointments in National Health Service hospitals in England and Wales in the years from 1959 to 1970 are set out below; comparable figures for years before 1959 are not available.

Year Number
1959 4800
1960 4877
1961 4982
1962 5050
1963 5075
1964 5106
1965 5301
1966 5394
1967 5489
1968 5552
1969 5618
1970 5710

Forward to