Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Palace still studying PhilHealth premium hike

- BY TIZIANA CELINE PIATOS @tribunephl_tiz

The fate of the proposed hike in the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. member contributi­ons remained uncertain as President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. is still reviewing the increase.

Malacañang confirmed this on Friday in a statement that contrasted with PhilHealth president and CEO Emmanuel Ledesma Jr.’s pronouncem­ent that Mr. Marcos had “no objection” to increasing PhilHealth contributi­ons.

“The review is still ongoing. The President wants to ensure that any increase in premiums will substantia­lly be much more in value in terms of benefits and coverage to PhilHealth members,” Communicat­ions Secretary Cheloy Garafil told Palace reporters in a Viber message.

In a press briefing in Pasig City, Ledesma said that the state health insurer had received a letter from the Office of the President via Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin, affirming that “they have no objection to the planned increase, which took effect on January 1st,” following a “very thorough study.”

Ledesma said the agency sought clarificat­ion from the President after Health Secretary Ted Herbosa appealed to halt the implementa­tion of the increase.

“It was clearly stated by (the President) that the premium increase will continue,” Ledesma said.

Herbosa urged Marcos to reconsider the proposed contributi­on increase last January.

“I’ll see. I’ll tell them. Okay, if you’re going to increase it, show the other side of that. What will be the increase in services? What will be able to cover? What more will you be able to cover?” Marcos said previously.

Starting 1 January, the premium rate rose to 5 percent, with the monthly basic salary ceiling increasing to P100,000 while maintainin­g the minimum at P10,000.

For instance, if a worker earns P10,000 monthly, their monthly PhilHealth contributi­on would now be P500 starting this year. This contributi­on will be evenly divided between the employee and the employer.

Last year, the premium rate was slated to increase to 4.5 percent, and the monthly basic salary ceiling was set to reach P90,000. However, Marcos postponed the adjustment due to the socioecono­mic challenges brought about by the pandemic.

The planned increase in PhilHealth rates aligns with the Universal Health Care Law enacted in 2019 during the administra­tion of then-President Rodrigo Duterte.

The law stipulates incrementa­l hikes in the PhilHealth contributi­on rates, culminatin­g in them reaching 5 percent by 2024.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH BY LARRY CRUZ FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE ?? Ledesma said the agency sought clarificat­ion from the President after Health Secretary Ted Herbosa appealed to halt the implementa­tion of the increase.
Rising, rising A rebar man does a balancing act, a constructi­on sector job that is not for everyone, especially not for those who fear heights.
PHOTOGRAPH BY LARRY CRUZ FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE Ledesma said the agency sought clarificat­ion from the President after Health Secretary Ted Herbosa appealed to halt the implementa­tion of the increase. Rising, rising A rebar man does a balancing act, a constructi­on sector job that is not for everyone, especially not for those who fear heights.

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