they are undergoing a privatisation binge nad note that saudi per capita income 
which is the leading gulf state fell from 18,000 $ in 1981 to about 6,000$ in 
2001. so this is an income as volatile as oil and it does not benefit the 
poorer arabs going right in to the vaults of the US treasury. so it takes 
littkle for capiatl to create a parasitic consuming national class in the gulf 
when it could deprive everyone else of that wealth

----- Original Message ----
From: ken hanly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: PEN-L@SUS.CSUCHICO.EDU
Sent: Tuesday, November 6, 2007 5:54:01 AM
Subject: Kuwait : Health and Welfare

THe problems that Soulas points out are real enough
but so are the benefits provided to citizens. Here is
the example of Kuwait. Free health care, free
education through the university level. No taxes etc.
etc. not too bad. I wouldn't mind being a Kuwaiti
citizen. This from this site.
http://countrystudies.us/persian-gulf-states/19-Health.htm

It may be that the extensive welfare state has been
scaled back in recent years. I don't know for sure.

Kuwait Health and Welfare
Persian Gulf States Table of Contents
The health care system and health conditions also
improved dramatically in the years after oil revenues
brought wealth to the country. Kuwait's first attempts
to introduce a modern health care system date back to
the first years of the twentieth century when the
ruler, Shaykh Mubarak Al Sabah the Great, invited
doctors from the Arabian Mission of the Dutch Reformed
Church in the United States to establish a clinic. By
1911 the group had organized a hospital for men and in
1919 a small hospital for women. In 1934 the
thirty-four-bed Olcott Memorial Hospital opened.
Between 1909 and 1946, Kuwait experienced gradual,
albeit limited, improvement in health conditions.
General mortality stood between twenty and twenty-five
per 1,000 population and infant mortality between 100
and 125 per 1,000 live births. After the government
began receiving oil revenues, it expanded the health
care system, beginning with the opening of the Amiri
Hospital in 1949. The Kuwait Oil Company (KOC) also
opened some small health facilities. By 1950 general
mortality had fallen to between seventeen and
twenty-three per 1,000 population and infant mortality
to between eighty and 100 per 1,000 live births.In the
1950s, the government introduced a comprehensive
health care system offering free services to the
entire population. Free health care was so extensive
that it even included veterinary medicine.
Expenditures on health ranked third in the national
budget, after public works and education. As with
education, the system relied heavily on foreigners.
Most of the physicians were foreigners, particularly
Egyptians. Critics charged the designers of the system
with paying undue attention to acquiring the most
modern and expensive medical equipment, without regard
to the country's health priorities, and favoring
treatment over prevention. Nonetheless, improvements
in available health care and in public health were
dramatic. The number of doctors grew from 362 in 1962
to 2,641 in 1988. The doctor-to-patient ratio improved
from one to 1,200 to one to 600. Infant and child
mortality rates dropped dramatically; in 1990 the
infant mortality rate was fifteen per 1,000 live
births. Life expectancy increased ten years in the
postindependence years, putting Kuwait at a level
comparable to most industrialized countries. In 1990
life expectancy for males was seventy-two years and
for females seventy-six years.

In addition to a comprehensive system of health care,
the government provides residents with one of the
world's most encompassing social service systems. Not
only does it indirectly support the national
population through guaranteed state employment and
subsidized services (such as water and electricity),
but it also supports those most in need through direct
subsidies. These include the disabled, the elderly,
the unemployed, students and their families, the
widowed, the unmarried, and even the families of
prisoners.

By 1990 Kuwait had an extensive welfare program,
exceeded perhaps by no other country. Citizens receive
free medical services from highly trained
practitioners in modern facilities; free education
through the university level; subsidized food,
housing, utilities, and transportation; and various
other benefits. For all this, they pay no taxes: the
system is supported by oil revenues from outside the
country. On the eve of the Iraqi invasion, the United
Nations Development Programme placed Kuwait at the top
of its annual human development index with a life
expectancy of 73.4 years, an adult literacy rate of 73
percent, and a real per capita gross domestic product
of US$15,984. The benefits of the welfare system,
however, are unevenly distributed among the
population. Noncitizens in particular benefit much
less, and many, especially those from Arab states and
those who have worked many years in Kuwait, resent
their disadvantaged position.




Blog:  http://kenthink7.blogspot.com/index.html
Blog:  http://kencan7.blogspot.com/index.html

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