‘Accord top priority to healthcare’
Stakeholders weigh in on the areas that need redressal in the Budget
By : migrator
Update: 2018-01-22 17:43 GMT
Chennai
The budget must acknowledge that quality of healthcare delivery is non-negotiable. The public sentiment in India should understand that quality care demands heavy investment of capital, and more importantly, skilled manpower, both of which are in short supply, leading to an acute crisis in healthcare delivery. It is critical that all stakeholders – the public, Government and the private sector come together now to create a partnership of trust, which empowers the private sector to create and build capacity.
By according National Priority Status for healthcare, the Government can signal its intent to put in place an enabling environment that will attract capital – both financial and intellectual, and stimulate the creation of high-quality capacity. Several approaches in combination can be used for this – in public-private partnership (PPP) models, or purely by incentivising the private sector with carefully structured tax benefits.
The Payor problem demands urgent attention – We urge the Government to adopt Universal Health Insurance at viable rates for all players, and to incentivise the consumers through higher tax deductions for healthcare expenditure and insurance payments. Zero rating of health care services and health care insurance premiums under the GST regime would be most important to ensure that the cost of care remains protected for the consumer.
It is important to note that healthcare is the fifth largest employer and has the potential to generate 7.5 million direct jobs by 2022. Every hospital bed creates 5 direct jobs, and an exponential number of indirect jobs. But more importantly, it is the only sector that takes responsibility for the health of the nation.
Suneeta Reddy, MD, Apollo Hospitals
Voice on the street
DTNext gets talking to citizens and finds what he/she expects from the Union Budget to be tabled on February 1
The prices of goods and services have gone up since GST came about. Whether it’s movie tickets, restaurant charges, medical services, everything costs more today. Even before we could recover from note ban, GST delivered another blow which set businesses, MSMEs back by at least six months.
Small traders and middlemen were left hanging. They are the lifeblood of the economy and they barely stand to benefit in any budget. Right now, we are trying to file the GST returns, which is so cumbersome. The Budget needs to be inclusive towards SMBs and focus on eliminating red tape. I feel things are only going to get more difficult in the future – considering how much paperwork we must put up with.
— Varun Jain, SME Entrepreneur
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