Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Health spends can’t be left to chance

Paying taxes for a pooling mechanism can help one meet unexpected healthcare expenses

- NACHIKET MOR Nachiket Mor and Jack Langenbrun­ner are both employees of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation The views expressed are personal

Costs relating to healthcare have a feature that is very different from that of virtually all the other services such as education, food, and clothing. This is the extremely high variabilit­y associated with these expenses. There are long periods when most individual­s have predictabl­e expenses which can be planned for through savings. However, there are times when some individual­s face very high levels of expenditur­es, such as when they get cancer or are severely injured in an accident. An important question that all societies need to answer is how will these expenses be paid for?

Economic theory indicates that expenses that have such an uncertain character are not best financed through savings and loans because those tools ultimately are limited by the lifetime income and other expenses of that particular individual.

Instead it suggests that since all individual­s, including those that are completely well, face the possibilit­y that they may need to incur such expenses at a moment’s notice, they will be better off if they paid a fixed sum of money into a pool on a regular basis, and relied on this pool to pay for these unpredicta­ble expenses.

Theory also argues that since almost all individual­s don’t like risk, participat­ing in such an arrangemen­t will reduce the level of risk that they experience, and even if they never need to draw on the pool, they will feel better.

However, despite the strength of the argument, the global experience is that most individual­s do not spontaneou­sly choose to participat­e in such an arrangemen­t. There are a number of reasons for this, including poverty, and potentiall­y the fact that evolution designed the human race to give little or no importance to the risk of falling seriously ill or dying sometime in the future. This is a core problem with which countries around the world have grappled.

In upper income countries, the most popular solution has been to use payment of taxes as a pooling mechanism and then to offer free healthcare services to individual­s when they need them. Unlike in India where only 15-20% of the health expenditur­e is met out of tax resources, in the US the number is 50% and in Canada and the UK it goes up to as high as 80%.

Others, like Germany and Japan, require employers to compulsori­ly deduct a certain portion of the employee’s salary and pay this into one or more pools of funds. These countries then use their tax resources to pay into these pools on behalf of those that are not able to pay because of poverty or unemployme­nt, and to shore up pools themselves if, for some reason, they run out of money. Compulsory deductions account for close to 60-65% of health expenditur­e in these countries. India’s Employee State Insurance Scheme has a similar character but currently accounts for less than 1% of annual health expenditur­es.

In Asia, Malaysia seeks to rely principall­y on tax resources.

South Korea’s National Health Insurance system has more than 350 not-for-profit health insurance societies for three different types of insured persons: industrial workers, government employers and teachers, and self-employed workers, all of whom have to compulsori­ly pay in to these pools to get the benefit.

China uses a combinatio­n of enhanced tax-based funding and the pooling of funds across four major insurance schemes for i) urban sector workers in formal employment and in the government; ii) informal and non-working groups in urban areas, especially pensioners and children; iii) a rural health cooperativ­e scheme; and iv) the Medical Assistance programme for the poor and vulnerable groups to supplement the basic package.

Other countries in the region, Philippine­s, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Mongolia, have establishe­d a single national employer-based programme as a way to pool funds. African countries such as Ghana and Rwanda have experiment­ed with a combinatio­n of strong government interventi­ons to expand tax-based and contributo­ry risk pools simultaneo­usly, to make substantia­l progress.

Economic theory makes it clear that some form of pooling is essential for all countries to meet the highly variable components of health expenditur­es and to make them affordable.

Experience­s of different countries, however, suggest that each one will have to approach it based on its own unique context. For India, it is very likely that a combinatio­n of the Asian and African models will be the most relevant because it does not have either the tax base or the formal sector employee base of the Europeans and the Canadians.

 ?? HINDUSTAN TIMES ?? The Employee State Insurance Scheme accounts for less than 1% of annual health expenditur­es
HINDUSTAN TIMES The Employee State Insurance Scheme accounts for less than 1% of annual health expenditur­es
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India