Hindustan Times (Delhi)

In Covid backdrop, budget may focus on health, infra, transport

- Sweta Goswami and Abhishek Dey sweta.goswami@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Delhi budget this year will focus on health, basic infrastruc­ture and transport, senior officials who are drafting the document said, adding that the government is likely to announce free Covid-19 vaccines for all and a cloudbased patient informatio­n management system.

They said government may hold the budget session of the Delhi assembly between March 12 and 20 which will the first after the Covid-19 pandemic. In the last budget (2020-21), which came soon after the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) swept to power in the February 8 assembly elections last year, the government allocated ₹7,704 crore for the health sector, nearly 3% more than the previous fiscal. Health may get the highest allocation this year, the officials said.

“Among the big-ticket healthcare projects to be announced this year will be the cloud-based health informatio­n management system (HIMS). The chief minister has issued directions to roll out the project by August this year. It will start with Delhi government hospitals and then expanded to dispensari­es and mohalla clinics. Upgrading a couple of hospitals with increased bed capacity is also on the cards,” said a senior health department official on condition of anonymity.

The HIMS project envisages digital health cards for patients, which will be essentiall­y a QR code-based system that will keep a record of clinical details such as health checks, followups, surgeries, medication­s and vaccinatio­ns for each patient. The system is also supposed to include a mobile phone applicatio­n as well as a 24x7 call centre to help patients with health-related informatio­n, fix consultati­ons and other assistance.

In its past budgets, the AAP government has consistent­ly allocated the maximum share of its resources for education, followed by health. This year, the health sector is likely to get an increased allocation.

Last year, the government allocated ₹15,815 crore for education, an increase of 1.3% from the previous year.

“In last year’s budget, the government allocated ₹50 crore in the Covid-19 management fund. This is likely to continue this year and will be increased in all likelihood as the focus shifts to vaccinatio­n. The Delhi government is working on making Covid vaccine free for the general public. The Central government has made it free only for healthcare workers and frontline workers,” said a second health official.

With elections in the three Bharatiya Janata Party (Bjp)-ruled municipal corporatio­ns scheduled next year, senior AAP leaders said the government is also finding additional ways to optimise resources so as to ease the financial crisis faced by the three civic bodies.

The bypolls to five municipal wards will be held on February 28, and the AAP is eyeing these seats to increase its stake in the city’s municipal affairs, a senior member of Delhi’s ruling party said.

Between January 5 and 25, the government issued orders to all department­s asking them to tighten their expenses by prioritisi­ng projects under their jurisdicti­on.

The transport sector may also get a higher outlay this year as the Delhi Transport Corporatio­n (DTC) will start bringing in its new 1,000 low-floor buses and the first lot of the electric buses will also be brought in.

“DTC’S order for buses alone accounts for ₹893 crore with an additional annual maintenanc­e cost of ₹300 crore in the first year since rolling out of these buses. The revised estimate for the transport sector in 2020-21 was about ₹5,000 crore, this is likely to touch ₹7,000 crore in the 2021-22 budget,” said a senior transport official.

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