This article uses case study data to discuss how a new procurement policy (Local Improvement Finance Trust, or LIFT) in English primary care may affect general practitioners’ control over their work. LIFT, a series of 51 public–private partnerships, will enable over the medium term a shift towards the corporate ownership of surgeries and the creation of polyclinics or ‘onestop- shops’. In this article, I explore the struggles over work autonomy and control within these new LIFT structures, as expressed by clinicians and managers in meetings and in research interviews. More generally, I consider how the fi ndings inform debates over the changing position of professionals within increasingly fi nancialized ‘local health economies’. |