A necessary read and I enjoyed this book, even if it was a bit dry at times. It mostly reads like an extended essay and the force of his moral arguments outweigh the several tables of quantitative data used to back up his arguments. This book was written before the contaminated blood scandal erupted in Britain, but its findings were prescient at the time and even more relevant today as Western societies increasingly subject their public services and welfare regimes to a utilitarian, value-for-money ethos based not so much on the ethical principle of selflessly giving to strangers, but on a quantifiable, what’s-in-it for me individualism. You’ll need to persist, but it’s a worthwhile read. It also sheds a lot of light on the philosophical and policy direction of Mark Drakeford’s Welsh Government.