Mail & Guardian

‘Stop resisting the NHI plan’

The ANC’S Parks Tau reaffirms the government’s stance that medical aid tax breaks will be forfeited to fund the universal healthcare plan

- Khaya Koko

Parks Tau has dismissed criticism of the proposed R200 billion National Health Insurance (NHI) as “resistance” by private healthcare users, who he said were effectivel­y subsidised by the state.

The deputy minister of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs represente­d the ANC at a national election debate hosted by the Mail & Guardian and the University of Fort Hare in a week in which Health Minister Joe Phaahla confirmed, in a written parliament­ary reply, medical aid tax credits would be revoked to fund the NHI.

Tau reiterated the ANC’S stance that a single-fund system will follow if President Cyril Ramaphosa signs the NHI Bill, which parliament passed in December. The legislatio­n, he said, aims to ensure equitable access to quality healthcare.

Clause 49 of the bill envisions “tax amendments” to be gazetted by the finance minister to finance the insurance scheme’s single fund, which the treasury says will need about R200 billion to run.

Tau said that the country had a two-tier healthcare system — public and private — and the former was “strained” while the latter was more developed.

“But what they [the critics] are not saying is that even if you have private

health insurance, you get a rebate on your taxes. So, the state subsidises your access to the private health system.”

He added that quality healthcare should not only be the preserve of

those who could afford it.

“As we seek to implement the National Health Insurance we understand that there will be resistance, because some would want to protect the little that is there.

“But we are about the majority of the people of this country,” Tau said.

Siviwe Gwarube, debating on behalf of the Democratic Alliance, agreed that the country had a “twotier healthcare system”, adding that “poor South Africans have been subjected to a broken healthcare system for decades”.

Gwarube alluded to the unlawful R10 million “bicycle ambulances” championed by axed former health minister Zweli Mkhize during the Covid-19 pandemic — which the Special Investigat­ing Unit set aside after an inquiry found widespread corruption — as evidence of the ANC’S mismanagem­ent.

“And now you want to open up another SOE [state-owned enterprise] and expect us to trust the wolves in sheeps’ skin? We’re not going to do that,” she said, adding that “it cannot be that people continue to be seen in mud houses [for health facilities]”.

Economic Freedom Fighters deputy president Floyd Shivambu said South Africa should emulate Cuba’s preventati­ve healthcare system to create universal access, saying the Caribbean country “contained diseases before [patients] reached tertiary healthcare facilities”.

“South Africa doesn’t have a healthcare system, it has a hospitalis­ation system where you wait for people to get sick, so that you take them to hospitals,” Shivambu charged.

Inkatha Freedom Party deputy president Mzamo Buthelezi argued that state interventi­on had to be kept away from the private sector, saying: “You cannot deny any South African his or her right to choose as to where [they] want to be cured.

“If you shut down the private sector, where will people go to be cured?” Buthelezi asked.

Action SA Eastern Cape premier candidate Athol Trollip, a former Nelson Mandela Bay municipali­ty mayor, said his party had Dr Kgosi Letlape, an ophthalmol­ogist and former chair of the South African Medical Associatio­n, as its health expert, who would forge a “partnershi­p between the private and public health systems — get them to work together”.

“Because, at one stage in the history of this country, both of those systems were acclaimed — they had some of the best doctors in the world,” Trollip said.

He said public representa­tives and MPS should be forced to use state the health facilities so that they would be improved.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? Photos: Delwyn Verasamy ?? Heated debate: Economic Freedom Fighters deputy president Floyd Shivambu and Athol Trollip, Actionsa’s Eastern Cape premier candidate, (above right) at question time, which at times elicited strong reactions from the audience (above left and below).
Photos: Delwyn Verasamy Heated debate: Economic Freedom Fighters deputy president Floyd Shivambu and Athol Trollip, Actionsa’s Eastern Cape premier candidate, (above right) at question time, which at times elicited strong reactions from the audience (above left and below).
 ?? ?? Talk shop: Representa­tives of political parties take part in the Mail & Guardian’s election debate, hosted by economics editor Sarah Smit and political editor Lizeka Tandwa (above right).
Talk shop: Representa­tives of political parties take part in the Mail & Guardian’s election debate, hosted by economics editor Sarah Smit and political editor Lizeka Tandwa (above right).
 ?? ?? Bill of heallth: The deputy minister of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs, Parks Tau, represente­d the ANC at the debate.
Bill of heallth: The deputy minister of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs, Parks Tau, represente­d the ANC at the debate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa