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Shifting health to the Concurrent List
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- More centralisation is the norm: The Fifteenth Finance Commission Chairman N.K. Singh said that health should be shifted to the Concurrent list under the Constitution. Presently, ‘Health’ is under the State List. He also pitched for a Developmental Finance Institution (DFI) dedicated to healthcare investments.
- Points to note: India is a vast and diverse land, and the founder fathers (creators of the constitution) had envisaged decentralisation in some of the most crucial areas, including health. But in today's times, more and more centralisation is being attempted, often with not so good results.
- Arguments for shifting ‘Health’ to the Concurrent List - It will give the Centre greater flexibility to enact regulatory changes and reinforce the obligation of all stakeholders towards providing better healthcare. It will help in rationalisation and streamlining of multiple Acts. There is a multiplicity of Acts, rules and regulations, and mushrooming institutions, yet the regulation of the sector is far from adequate. With the health in the concurrent list, uniformity of acts can be ensured. The Central government is also technically better equipped to come up with the health schemes because it has the assistance of multiple research bodies and departments dedicated to the management of public health. States do not have the technical expertise to independently design comprehensive public health policies.
- Arguments against shifting ‘Health’ to the Concurrent List - This move will not be necessary nor sufficient to guarantee the provision of accessible, affordable and adequate healthcare for all. The right to health is already provided for by the Constitution’s Article 21 that guarantees protection of life and liberty. This move will challenges the federal structure of India. Shifting ever more subjects from the states to the Centre would erode India’s federal nature and impair efficiency by abandoning the principle of subsidiarity, which holds that any task should be left to the level of government best placed to do it. The centre must direct its energies to designing policy that would help states deliver on their constitutional mandate to provide adequate, accessible and affordable healthcare for all, rather than trying to concentrate power, when it is burdened with multiple tasks already.
- Funding issue: The Centre devolves 41% of the taxes it collects to the states. The Centre should encourage the states to do what they are supposed to do, while the Centre optimises use of its own resources, focusing on its obligations. Health being a state subject does not preclude the Centre offering constructive support.
- Index: The NITI Aayog’s Health Index, financial assistance through the insurance-based programme Ayushman Bharat, improved regulatory environment for healthcare providers and medical education are examples of such support that can nudge states in the right direction.
- Developmental Finance Institution (DFI) for healthcare: A health sector-specific DFI is much needed on the same lines as that of DFIs for other sectors like National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development -NABARD (agriculture), National Housing Bank- NHB (Housing) and Tourism Finance Corporation of India Ltd. - TFCI (tourism). Such a DFI would increase health care access in tier-2 and tier-3 cities and also come with technical assistance that ensures proper usage of funds.
- Other suggestions by N.K. Singh:
- Increase the government spending on health to 2.5% of GDP by 2025
- Primary healthcare should be a fundamental commitment of all States in particular and should be allocated at least two-thirds of health spending
- To have a standardisation of health care codes for both the Centre and states
- Forming an All India Medical and Health Service
- Given the inter-state disparity in the availability of medical doctors, it is essential to constitute the Service as is envisaged under Section 2A of the All-India Services Act, 1951
- Need for Universalisation of Healthcare Insurance: Existing coverage in the Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY) covers the bottom two income quintiles and commercial insurance largely covers top-income quintiles, thereby creating a ‘missing middle’ class in between. This 'Missing Middle' refers to people in the middle two income quintiles, where the population is not rich enough to afford commercial insurance and not poor enough to be covered under government-sponsored health insurance schemes.
- Concurrent List: The subject-wise distribution of legislative power is given in the three lists of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution - (i) List-I- the Union List; (ii) List-II- the State List; (iii) List-III- the Concurrent List. Both the Parliament and state legislature can make laws with respect to any of the matters enumerated in the Concurrent List. It includes the matters on which uniformity of legislation throughout the country is desirable but not essential. But State legislation operates to the extent that it is not in conflict with the Central legislation. At times, the very presence of a central legislation can negate the state’s ability to legislate. This list has at present 52 subjects (originally 47) like criminal law and procedure, civil procedure, marriage and divorce, population control and family planning, electricity, labour welfare,economic and social planning, drugs, newspapers, books and printing press, and others. The 42nd Amendment Act of 1976 transferred five subjects to Concurrent List from State List i.e education, forests, weights and measures, protection of wild animals and birds, and administration of justice; constitution and organisation of all courts except the Supreme Court and the High Courts.
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