Deccan Chronicle

Health boost in Budget, but more is expected

- Rajeev Ahuja The writer is a developmen­t economist, formerly with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the World Bank

Finance minister Arun Jaitley needs to be congratula­ted for the major allocation he did for health in the Union Budget 2017-18. Health allocation­s to the health ministry and the Ayush ministry have increased to `50,283crore, which represents a healthy increase of about 27 per cent over the allocation of `39,533crore in the previous Budget. This growth in allocation­s is the highest ever growth in nominal terms in the last 15 years! In real terms too, after adjusting for medical inflation that’s expected to remain stable in the coming fiscal, it should represent a healthy growth.

Many stakeholde­rs were expecting still higher allocation­s for health. What could be the basis for the higher expectatio­ns ? One is India’s track record of low public health spending; and two, the absence of any announceme­nt relating to the National Health Protection Scheme as well as lack of clarity in funding of some new programmes.

Low public health spending in India: No matter what indicator of government health spending is considered — as a share of GDP (1.3 per cent in 2014-15) or as a share in total government spending (4.8 per cent in 2014-15) or as a per capita spending (less than $20 in 2013-14) – India comes out poorly in comparison to its peers. However, government health spending in India has historical­ly been low. It is wrong to expect a few rounds of annual Budgets to correct the distortion. Further, the Central government spends only 1/3rd of total govern- ment health spending. This means that a majority (2/3rd) of the government spending actually comes from the states. Therefore, states have an important role to play in increasing government health spending. With the implementa­tion of the 14th Finance Commission recommenda­tions, the role of states in funding of healthcare has only expanded.

At the state level, the issue with healthcare is not just about its financing. States are also responsibl­e for getting health services delivered. That there are huge gaps in public healthcare delivery system is well-known. States understand well that healthcare delivery and financing are two wheels of the healthcare cart. Both wheels need to move in tandem.

To get the states spend significan­tly more on health, delivery of health services must improve. This is not just a simple question of plugging of gaps in service delivery. The delivery system requires an architectu­ral correction to make it responsive to the changing needs of the population, better management and higher accountabi­lity of the delivery system. This correction requires highest political commitment and strong leadership and vision in each state.

National health protection scheme (NHPS): The Prime Minister’s Independen­ce Day speech of August 2016 and the finance minister’s Budget speech of February 2016 probably created expectatio­ns of the government announcing NHPS, which proposes to provide financial protection against hospitalis­ation costs of up to `1 lakh to the poor and also brings a larger population under its fold. Lack of such an announceme­nt, belied the people’s expectatio­ns. The announceme­nt of the scheme would have been a populist move to woo the voters in the five poll-bound states.

Similarly, unclear funding for some new schemes may have been a reason for disappoint­ment among some stakeholde­rs, for example, a scheme of cash transfer of `6,000 to an expectant mother for promoting institutio­nal deliveries and immunisati­on as well as the ambitious targets set for eliminatio­n of kala-azar and filariasis by 2017, leprosy by 2018, measles by 2020, and tuberculos­is by 2025. Achievemen­t of these targets is as much dependent on states’ capacities to implement and fund them.

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