Mary Naughton

Mary Naughton

PhD Thesis Title: Protest in response to the commodification of healthcare in the era of the European Union’s new economic governance regime

Supervisor: Professor Roland Erne

External Examiner : Professor Donatella Della Porta, Scuola Normale Superiore, Florence, Italy



Abstract

In response to the 2008 financial crisis, the EU established a new economic governance 
(NEG) regime, which allowed the European Commission and Council to intervene to the 
financing and organisation of national healthcare services; as healthcare represents the single largest area of welfare state expenditure and service delivery. This thesis therefore addresses  the following questions: 
1) How have NEG policy prescriptions impacted the level of commodification of 
services and labour in Ireland and Madrid’s public health systems? 
2) Since the beginning of the financial crisis in 2008, how have unions and social 
movement organisations active in these health systems politicised changes in public 
service provision and employment conditions? 
3) How can we understand the choices of union and user groups organising in 
the sites of study regarding the scale at which they politicised policy changes related to the NEG regime and the scope of their demands?
In turn, through a contextualised semantic content analysis of NEG policy prescriptions 
issued to Spain and Ireland, this thesis first shows that EU executives have harnessed the 
NEG regime to promote the commodification of healthcare services and labour. Second, 
going beyond existing studies of NEG interventions in healthcare, the thesis then outlines the  measures that the Irish and the Spanish central governments and the regional government of  Madrid have adopted in line with these prescriptions and analyses their impact on healthcare  services and labour. I show that the governments’ implementation of NEG prescriptions has institutionalised the underfunding of the health systems under study and promoted the  corporatisation and privatisation of service delivery. Third, through a comprehensive protest  event analysis of counter-mobilisations involving unions and user groups in the two health  systems from September 2008 to March 2020, this thesis shows that the implementation of  healthcare-related NEG prescriptions altered the movement landscape in each site of study – prompting trade unions and user groups to organise at higher scales and to broaden the scope  of their demands. My study, however, also shows that resistance to commodification is a  project and building powerful counter-movements takes time. Although the NEG regime was  established relatively recently, this thesis shows that unions and user groups organising in the  health systems have begun the work of constructing the oppositional networks necessary to challenge corporate and political leaders at the EU scale. My research on movement  landscapes within these health systems will thus also serve future research by helping scholars  to contextualise and understand counter-movements that may emerge in the forthcoming post-pandemic era of the NEG regime

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