Business Day

Extra money for pay rises, but budget shrinks in real terms

- Tamar Kahn Health & Science Correspond­ent kahnt@businessli­ve.co.za

The National Treasury has made good on Health Minister Joe Phaahla’s promise that the government will find the money to hire more doctors, but the sector will remain under pressure as the health budget shrinks in real terms over the next three years.

Under rising pressure to reverse deep cuts in the medium-term budget policy statement in November, the Treasury allocated an extra R11.6bn to help cover last year’s higher-thanexpect­ed pay settlement. The Western Cape has been vocal about the effect of the centrally agreed pay deal that wasn’t fully funded by the Treasury and left provincial health department­s unable to fill essential posts.

The Treasury’s chief director for health and social developmen­t, Mark Blecher, said the extra money would not be enough to hire all the recently qualified doctors who could not secure jobs with the state, and

provincial health department­s would need to determine which posts should be prioritise­d.

“There will be less downsizing, and more posts will be filled, but it is unlikely they all will be,”

he said. Trade union Samatu estimates 800 recently qualified doctors who expected to work for the state were unable to find jobs. Provincial health department­s will remain under financial

pressure as consolidat­ed health expenditur­e grows a nominal 3.4 % in the medium term, said Blecher.

The Treasury estimates inflation will average 4.7% over the next three years which means the budget shrinks in real terms. The Treasury has set aside a revised estimate of R267.3bn for consolidat­ed health expenditur­e this year, rising to R271.9bn in 2024/25.

The consolidat­ed health budget then increases to R281.1bn in 2025/26 and R295.2bn in the outer year. This represents baseline reductions of R23.7bn over the medium term, Treasury said in the Budget Review.

While the budget makes no new provisions for National Health Insurance (NHI), Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana said in his speech to parliament the government remained committed to the policy.

The first piece of enabling legislatio­n was passed by parliament in December, but has yet to be signed into law by President

Cyril Ramaphosa. Major public sector reforms will be required to shift funds now allocated to provincial health department­s to NHI, said Blecher.

Programmes designed to lay the groundwork for NHI are largely funded through the NHI indirect grant which has been allocated R6.9bn over the next three years.

“A lot of preparator­y work still needs to be done. We won’t see tax proposals in the short term for NHI,” said Blecher referring to potential mechanisms for raising additional money for the NHI Fund, which is expected to purchase services for patients from accredited public and private providers.

The health department said previously that about R200bn will need to be raised via measures such as a surcharge on personal income tax and a payroll tax to supplement public sector funding sources.

The HIV/Aids component of the district health service grant has been cut by R1.3bn a year over the medium term, due to the number of people on treatment running “significan­tly below target” and cheaper-thanexpect­ed medicines, the Treasury said in its estimates of national expenditur­e. Only 5.5million of the estimated 7.8-million HIV-positive people in 2022/23 were on treatment.

The health facility infrastruc­ture grant has been reduced by R3.6bn over the next three years due to historic underspend­ing while an extra R1.1bn has been added to the national tertiary services grant to accommodat­e the restructur­ing of oncology services.

Medical scheme tax credits remain unchanged with no provision made for inflation, a measure that is expected to raise about R6bn in revenue over the medium term. The medical scheme tax credit remains at R364 per person a month for the first two members, and R246 per member a month for additional members.

 ?? /123RF/YURIY KLOCHAN ?? Tax credits: inflation.
Medical scheme tax credits remain unchanged, but no provision has been made for
/123RF/YURIY KLOCHAN Tax credits: inflation. Medical scheme tax credits remain unchanged, but no provision has been made for

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