The Citizen (Gauteng)

Health insurance in ICU

FUNDING: FREE BASIC HEALTHCARE DEPENDENT ON MONEY AND CAPACITY

- Chisom Jenniffer Okoye –jenniffero@citizen.co.za

Increase in higher eduction funding has exacerbate­d the problem.

The sustainabi­lity of the National Health Insurance (NHI), which government hopes will be able to provide free basic healthcare services to all South Africans, remains questionab­le, with affordabil­ity and state capacity being its biggest challenges.

Add to that the recent implementa­tion of free higher education and things look even more difficult.

Economist from the University of Johannesbu­rg Dr Sean Muller said the sustainabi­lity of the project was difficult to ascertain, as even the NHI white paper said that the “financing requiremen­ts are uncertain”.

He said affordabil­ity and state capacity challenges depended on the design of the system, as well as possible sources of funding, to succeed.

“Low economic growth in the past decade and a rapid increase in national debt relative to GDP reduced the capacity of the state to finance large, new social programmes.”

He said the recent commitment to dramatical­ly expand higher education funding, partly financed through an increase in VAT, made these limitation­s even more acute and as things stood, it would be irresponsi­ble of the government to finance the NHI through a significan­t increase in borrowing.

So, unless economic growth increased dramatical­ly, Muller suggested additional sources of revenue would be needed.

“One possible source of funding is the tax revenue government currently loses to medical aid tax credits, which in 2015-16 amounted to more than R20 billion. In fact, the 2018 budget announced that below-inflation increases in those tax credits will be used to fund an expansion of NHI preparatio­n over the next three years.

“The challenge here is coordinati­ng the withdrawal of these credits with the provision of the same resources. And even these revenues may not be enough.”

Muller said for the NHI to be sustainabl­e as a project, it needed to be operationa­lly successful, which required the expansion of healthcare services in a way that facilitate­d cross-subsidisat­ion of poorer South Africans by wealthier ones.

Muller said one major challenge to come from this was the ability of the national and provincial department­s of health to deliver health services to a suitable standard, that was not only good enough to meet the requiremen­ts of poor South Africans, but also those who might be able to afford alternativ­es.

“Given the many failures in the current healthcare system, and under-resourcing of that system, it remains an open question whether the NHI can be implemente­d in a successful, sustainabl­e way,” said Muller.

The national health department said to ensure the financial sustainabi­lity of the project, the NHI would take years to be implemente­d.

Health department spokespers­on, Popo Maja said: “The NHI is intended to be implemente­d over several years, so that financing can be increased progressiv­ely…

“The funds will be allocated from multiple sources which the National Treasury will identify on an annual basis.”

Irresponsi­ble to finance the NHI through borrowing.

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