Close to Sh24 billion per year will be needed to finance a plan
to give stipends and pay ...
medical insurance for people above the age of 70 years.
medical insurance for people above the age of 70 years.
Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich said
those covered under the existing programme, where vulnerable people
aged 65 years and above receive cash transfers, would continue.
Mr
Rotich said the idea to enhance the programme was thought prudent
because of the government’s experience handling the cash transfer
programme.
“I therefore propose that beginning January
2018, all persons above the age of 70 years will receive a cash transfer
in the form of a monthly stipend and NHIF cover that will be paid by
the government,” he said on Thursday to much applause in the National
Assembly.
The plan would however be an expensive
affair, almost equal to allocations to the counties of Nairobi (Sh14
billion) and Turkana (Sh11.3 billion) combined in the current financial
year.
That amount is Sh6 billion less than the cost of constructing Thika Road, which ended up at Sh30 billion.
The
Sh24 billion is based on estimates informed by data from the United
Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the government’s Social
Protection Policy.
According to UNDP, Kenya had 747,000 people aged 70 and above in 2015.
This
tallies with figures in the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics and
PopulationPyramid.net. The latter put the numbers at 774,768 broken down
into age groups between 70 and those more than a century old.
According
to social protection.or.ke, the amount paid to every household in which
there is one person aged 65 and above is Sh2,000 per month.
The money is delivered every two months through Equity Bank and KCB.
To fund that, the government would need to set aside Sh1.55 billion per month.
The
monthly charges for the National Health Insurance Fund for the
self-employed is Sh500, which means that there would need to be Sh387.4
million per month.
To qualify for the cash transfer,
one must be 65 and above, poor and vulnerable, not enrolled in any other
cash transfer programme plus a member of the household must not be
receiving any pension or regular income or in any gainful employment.
Speaking
after the Budget Statement on Thursday, Central Bank Governor Patrick
Njoroge described the plan as one of the bold proposals from Treasury.
“You don’t put in place a policy like that without thinking about how you will sustain it,” he said.
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