Economic Survey recommends increasing public health spending to 2.5-3% of GDP

By ANI | Published: January 29, 2021 05:44 PM2021-01-29T17:44:13+5:302021-01-29T17:55:07+5:30

The Economic Survey has strongly recommended an increase in public spending on healthcare services from 1 per cent to 2.5 to 3 per cent of GDP as envisaged in the National Health Policy 2017.

Economic Survey recommends increasing public health spending to 2.5-3% of GDP | Economic Survey recommends increasing public health spending to 2.5-3% of GDP

Economic Survey recommends increasing public health spending to 2.5-3% of GDP

The Economic Survey has strongly recommended an increase in public spending on healthcare services from 1 per cent to 2.5 to 3 per cent of GDP as envisaged in the National Health Policy 2017.

It notes that this can significantly reduce the Out-of-Pocket-Expenditure (OOPE) from 65 per cent to 35 per cent of the overall healthcare spend.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman tabled the Economic Survey 2020-21 in Parliament on Friday.

The survey observes that the health of a nation depends critically on its citizens having access to an equitable, affordable and accountable healthcare system.

The OOPE as a share of total health expenditure drops precipitously when public health expenditure increases.

The survey also underlines that OOPE for health increases the risk of vulnerable groups slipping into poverty because of catastrophic health expenditures.

It says that life expectancy in a country correlates positively with per-capita public health expenditure and India has one of the highest levels of OOPE in the world, contributing directly to the high incidence of catastrophic expenditures and poverty.

An official release said the survey notes that Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY) has been "a marquee evolution" for providing financial affordability to a large percentage of the Indian population.

In the chapter focused on healthcare, the survey points out that the recent COVID-19 pandemic has emphasised the importance of the healthcare sector and its inter-linkages with other key sectors of the economy.

One of the key learning from the ongoing pandemic is that it has showcased how a healthcare crisis can turn into an economic and social crisis.

It also cautions that healthcare policy must not become beholden to "saliency bias", where policy over-weighs a recent phenomenon.

It advises that to enable the country to respond to pandemics, the health infrastructure must be agile. Also, India's healthcare policy must continue focusing on its long-term priorities in the sector.

The survey observes that countries with more fragmented health systems tend to have lower performance as reflected in higher costs, lower efficiency, and poor quality.

"Therefore, in addition to providing healthcare services and financing healthcare, a key role for the government is to actively shape the structure of the healthcare market."

Observing that the National Health mission (NHM) has played a critical role in mitigating inequity as the access of the poorest to pre-natal and post-natal care and institutional deliveries have increased significantly, the survey has recommended that the NHM should be continued in conjunction to with Ayushman Bharat Yojana.

The Economic Survey has deeply examined the issue of information asymmetry in the healthcare sector.

It notes that as a bulk of the healthcare in India is provided by the private sector, it is critical for policymakers to design policies that mitigate information asymmetry in healthcare, "which creates market failures and renders unregulated private healthcare sub-optimal".

"Therefore, information utilities that help mitigate the information asymmetry can be very useful in enhancing overall welfare."

A key finding notes that the mitigation of information asymmetry would also help lower insurance premiums, enable better products and help increase the insurance penetration in the country.

Information utilities that help mitigate the information asymmetry in the healthcare sector can be very useful in enhancing overall welfare, it says.

The survey has recommended a sectoral regulator in the healthcare landscape to regulate and supervise the healthcare sector given the market failures stemming from information asymmetry.

Best practices from several countries such as Australia, England, Finland, Germany, The Netherlands and USA have been shared.

Drawing from the lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Economic Survey makes a strong case for complete adoption of telemedicine for meeting the last-mile challenges of healthcare delivery in the country.

Noting that the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has helped showcase the role of technology-enabled platforms (such as eSanjeev) as an alternate distribution channel for remote delivery of healthcare services, the survey has recommended harvesting the potential of technology-enabled platforms coupled with digitization and artificial intelligence at-scale.

As telemedicine depends crucially on internet connectivity, and health infrastructure and the number of telemedicine consultations correlate strongly with the internet penetration in a region, both central and the state governments have been advised to invest in telemedicine on a mission mode to complement the government's Digital Health Mission and enable greater access to the masses.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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