Family Guide to the National Insurance Scheme

1948 1948 1940s 32 pages : illustrations If you are not already insured under the present Health Insurance or Contributory Pensions Schemes, and have not atready registered (at either your place of work or at an Employment Exchange) you should register now. Get a registration form (C.F.6) from any...

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Bibliographic Details
Institution:MCR - The Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick
Language:English
English
Published: [London] : His Majesty's Stationery Office [1948]
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10796/B0911787-8B45-4BE9-B83C-4219CD641310
http://hdl.handle.net/10796/B6C82379-907F-4B78-B0C2-72F16C2E71DD
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Summary:1948 1948 1940s 32 pages : illustrations If you are not already insured under the present Health Insurance or Contributory Pensions Schemes, and have not atready registered (at either your place of work or at an Employment Exchange) you should register now. Get a registration form (C.F.6) from any Post Office, Employment Exchange or National Insurance Office, fill it in, and take or send it at once to your nearest Employment Exchange. Do not Register more than once. 4. Your National Insurance Office. The Government has always recognised that the Scheme can only be run successfully from an office within reach of your home where your own particular problem can be dealt with in a personal and friendly way. The Scheme will have to start without the full network of offices which has been planned, and sometimes your local office will not be all that the Government would like it to be, but this is an inevitable result of the war. Local announcements are being made as local National Insurance Offices are opened. You can always get the address from your Post Office or Employment Exchange. 5. What are the Contributions? A contribution must generally be paid each week according to your insurance class in that week. This contribution includes not only what you pay towards the National Insurance Scheme, but also what you pay towards the National Health Service, and, for those in Class I, towards Industrial Injury Insurance which replaces Workmen's Compensation. If you are in doubt, ask your National Insurance Office. 6 345/3/2/10
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