The proposed investment in healthcare is inadequate
Budget 2015 was catastrophic for health, as investments tanked to a historic low. Against that backdrop, when the Finance Minister talks about measures to tackle catastrophic health events, there’s bound to be some scepticism.


There is much evidence to show that insurance schemes in India fail to protect from out-of-pocket expenditure. The Prime Minister has been promising to provide free medicines and diagnostics for last two years since taking office.
But what emerges is an expansion of Jan Aushadhi (JA) stores to sell cheaper generic medicines. The impact of JA has remained limited, because who prescribes generic medicines for patients? Previous researches show that in many states even the public sector doctors are not willing to write generic medicines. Given the extent of irrational prescriptions — purchasing generic medicines when a prescription lists a branded drug is too much to expect from a consumer.
JA can no way substitute a Tamil Nadu model where standard quality medicines are procured cheap, effectively delivered to public facilities, prescribed by doctors by their generic (chemical) names and distributed free of cost to patients. The advantage of reaching your nadir is you can’t be pushed further down. And so is the case of the Budget on healthcare spending. If Budget 2015-16 saw the worst in the last three decades, it is natural that this would appear to improve in this Budget.
In the past few years, the government’s spending on health has been virtually stagnant. Every year, a fraction of the Budget allocation gets spent in actual terms.
There is no doubt that public spending on health has to improve in order to address the catastrophic effects of health care payment. But mere tinkering with insurance programmes will not suffice. A resilient health system needs to bebuilt on the grounds of equity, quality and universality. States like Tamil Nadu have demonstrated that it is possible to do.
(The writer is a researcher at the Public Health Foundation of India. The views expressed are personal.)