While reading the outcome statement and background document of
the joint World Bank/WHO ministerial level meeting on Universal Health coverage
held last week, two clear issues emerge: The first one is getting political
commitment to UHC at the highest government level; the second one is that
“fiscal realities (in poor countries in particular) greatly constrain the
ability to rely predominantly on public funding. Still, countries do not need
to be rich to make progress towards UHC, experience suggest that political
commitment is essential.”
The papers seem to suggest that fiscal
reality is cast in stone and that within this fiscal reality countries have the
political space to move forward to UHC. This approach, in essence, tells us
something about the sad situation we have come to live in. A reality in which
the financial oligarchy have taken over country democracies, according to Simon Johnson’s The Quiet Coup.
A reality in which economic inequalities have
an enormous negative impact on health equity and social wellbeing. Untaxed private wealth
hinders many countries to finance strong public systems to reach or maintain
Universal Health Coverage.
It is not only a problem of poorer countries.
We have the same within the European Union. For instance 23.400 “mailbox”
companies are registered in the Netherlands, with its infamous tax heaven
industry. It lead for instance to Portuguese and Spanish multinationals to
avoid paying tax in their respective countries. Both Spain and Portugal have to
severely cut their public spending on health
expenditures and privatize part of their health services, as
required by austerity measures set by the European Union. Even the G20 starts to recognize
that the tax avoidance by big business is a big problem for the social
development of societies.
These examples merely indicate that the issue
of fiscal space and progress on UHC are closely interlinked. The Lancet Article
“Political and economic aspects of
the transition to universal health coverage” explains it as follows:
“UHC will only be achieved if public policies ensure that a large share of this
increased spending is pooled through a mechanism that promotes equitable and
efficient utilization of care. The exact mechanisms for pooling will depend on
social processes and political action that establish the parameters for an
acceptable public role in health care. In some cases, the result will be a
government that primarily regulates the health-care sector, in other cases a
government that finances or directly provides care.” In many emerging
economies, such as South-Africa, Indonesia; but also in European countries with
traditional generous social security systems, there is strong political
pressure to remain attractive for international (financial) investors. In
parallel there is similar pressure to reduce public spending on health care and
create space for health insurance companies in the market of (mandatory) social
insurance packages. Authors have coined this process of tax competition “a race to the bottom in slow motion”,
with specific policies becoming less generous without disappearing, or creating
a public debt that will eventually force their termination.
The authors also suggest a mechanism to mitigate this race to the
bottom, the so called social protection floor. The idea
underpinning this initiative is that all states would commit to agreed minimum
levels of social protection tailored for their respective country. The UN General Assembly resolution
concerning universal health coverage acknowledges
the link between universal health coverage and social protection mechanism,
and urges member states to give priority to these links within their national
social programs and policies.
The
contradiction is obvious: There is a strong drive to have Universal Health
Coverage included in the post 2015 development agenda and for countries to
advance UHC at national level. At the same time these countries are dealing
with (global) tax competition, tax evasion and a deregulated financial sector
that is playing with casino capital at a global level. It is a good first step
that WHO and World Bank work with member states to increase capacity and
undertake steps towards universal health coverage. Actors working on advancing
UHC inevitably will come to the issue of claiming national policy and fiscal
space as a basic macro-economic condition for a country to advance its coverage
of social protection and health services. Good examples in these include Brazil
and Thailand.
The
question is whether all the countries that are now supporting the cause of UHC
are willing to make progress on further regulation of the financial sector and
reform of their fiscal policies. Are these countries able to agree on global
redistribution mechanisms and regulatory mechanism to curb the massive amount
of untaxed wealth and casino capital, and hence free considerable resources to
fund the national social protection floors? Will countries be able to develop
true “progressive” taxation schemes, not merely income or VAT based, but rather
on wealth and CO2 emission? Or do we want rather global philanthropy to
provide the complimentary funds for advances in UHC and social security?
Bottom
line: Universal Health coverage is in essence linked to political demands,
choices and inherent power relations, both at the national and global level. If
we all agree to have UHC included in the post 2015 agenda, then we should be
willing to be truly involved in the political and ideological battle that will
enfold over the coming period.
Remco van de Pas, Wemos
remco.van.de.pas@wemos.nl
First published as editorial in: MMI Network news, 26 February 2013
http://www.medicusmundi.org/en/mmi-network/documents/newsletter/201302