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Written by Gaya: Published in Business Times Newspaper
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Friday, 03 February 2012 07:15
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Social
health insurance benefit is an important catalyst for socio-economic
development in a country. Tanzania is one of the poorest countries in the
world with estimated GNP per capita of about USD 260.00 (2000 estimates) and a
GDP growth rate of about 4.0 percent per annum. The population growth
rate is 2.8 percent per annum. Agriculture is the mainstream of economy
and accounts for 75 to 78 percent of the total export earnings. The total
export earnings are sufficient to meet only one third of the country’s import
requirements. Social health insurance is also an important stimulus for
development of the health sector in a country. It helps to strengthen
accessibility, affordability, equity and quality of health care.
In
Tanzania the state of health amongst the population is poor notwithstanding the
tremendous drive by the Government to remedy the situation. The crude birth rate is around 41 per 1,000
populations and the fertility rate is 5.6.
Infant mortality rate is about 99 per 1,000 populations and the average
life expectancy at birth is about 49 years (female) and 47 years (male). HIV/AIDS prevalence rate among adults is about
10–14 percent. There is wide disparity
in the availability of health services from one part of the country to another.
The
socio-political climate in the country is characterised by increased interest
in privatisation and shift of the economy from socialist orientation to
capitalist market orientation.
Globalisation is also taking the country by storm and the population
dynamics are rapidly changing.
Rural–urban migration is rapidly rising.
All these changes demand establishment of social institutions like the
social health insurance schemes to stabilize the economy. NSSF is a Social
Security Organization administering several social security benefits to its
members and their dependants. The Act
establishing the Fund empowers it to administer social health insurance benefit
to its members.
The
Tanzania population has been exposed to free medical care for several
decades. The concept of social health
insurance is new to them and may not be readily understood and accepted. It is
well known that the Fund is well established and has been operational for
several years. And we believe that up to date the Fund has enough capacity, in
terms of health manpower, to handle the demands of social health insurance
scheme.
The
government has put in place a number of policy initiatives and strategies to
stem poverty and strengthen health care and delivery in the country. GDP growth rate per annum is targeted to rise
from 5.2 percent to 6.0 percent in the next three years and per capita
expenditure on health was targeted to rise from USD 6.00 in 2001 to USD 9.00 in
2004 and thereafter to USD 12.00. There are many health institutions in the
country, both public and non-public, which can be used by the Fund to
operationalize the Health Insurance Scheme.
A number of health insurance
schemes have been established in the past few years. These include the National
Health Insurance Fund and several private insurance schemes. Experiences from these schemes we believe
that would enable the Fund to run its social Health Insurance Benefit scheme
(SHIB) more efficiently and effectively.
The
rate of enrolment of beneficiaries is said to be unsatisfactory, what are the
factors influencing the low rate of enrolment of social health insurance beneficiaries.
Contribution rate by members is fixed.
From its inception in 1998, NSSF has collected 20 per cent of insurable
earnings even though this is above the ILO's recommendation of 8 per cent of
insurable earnings. The maintenance of the contribution rate at a level higher
than necessary seems to have been justified on grounds that the NSSF continues
to permit young insured members to withdraw their pension contributions under
certain conditions. This is an assurance enough to meet the needs of the insurance
scheme for its members.
This situation has probably created a public
perception that the NSSF is a continuity of the former NPF and that their
pension contributions are savings that can still be withdrawn for specific
purposes. This appears to be in conflict with the basic objective of a social
insurance pension scheme, where in principle all monies collected should be
utilized for the explicit purpose of providing lifetime pensions and other
benefits according to the enacted legal provisions.
The consequences of this
approach have been the withdrawal of large parts of the pension contributions
available to the young people concerned before retirement, and the payment of
lump sums instead of a periodic pension. Both of these relegate young people and
other beneficiaries to the ranks of the poorest, once they have exhausted the
funds so paid out. But at the same time the evasion of pension contribution is
said to be increasing at increasing rate.
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