Intro to Health Budgeting - Money Matters Medically
- Health Budget: A time-bound financial plan for the health sector, detailing expected income and planned expenditure. Translates health policy into action.
- Importance:
- Systematic allocation of scarce resources.
- Prioritization of competing health programs/services.
- Instrument for efficiency, equity, and public accountability.
- Key Economic Concepts in Budgeting:
- Scarcity: Societal wants exceed available resources.
- Opportunity Cost: Value of best alternative forgone when making a choice.
- Efficiency:
- Allocative: Funding 'right' service mix for maximum health gain.
- Technical: Producing services at 'least cost'.
- Budget Cycle (Simplified): Formulation → Approval → Execution → Review/Audit.
⭐ India's National Health Policy 2017 aims to increase public health expenditure to 2.5% of GDP by 2025, a key budgetary target.
Types of Health Budgets - Blueprinting Finances
- Line-item Budget:
- Focus: Inputs (e.g., salaries, supplies, equipment).
- Pros: Simple to prepare, good expenditure control.
- Cons: Inflexible, no direct link to performance or outcomes.
- Performance Budget:
- Focus: Activities & outputs (e.g., number of immunizations, OPD attendance).
- Pros: Links funds to results, promotes efficiency.
- Cons: Difficulty in defining and measuring performance indicators.
- Programme Budget (PPBS - Planning, Programming, Budgeting System):
- Focus: Objectives & outcomes (e.g., reduce IMR by X%, disease control programs).
- Pros: Goal-oriented, aids priority setting, links planning to budget.
- Cons: Complex, data-intensive, requires skilled personnel.
- Zero-Based Budgeting (ZBB):
- Focus: Justify every expenditure item from scratch for each budget cycle.
- Pros: Eliminates outdated/inefficient programs, promotes resource reallocation.
- Cons: Very time-consuming, can be disruptive if not managed well.
- Flexible Budget:
- Focus: Designed to change in relation to activity levels (e.g., patient load).
- Pros: Useful for institutions with variable workload/demand.
- Cons: More complex to prepare and manage.
⭐ PPBS (Planning, Programming, Budgeting System) is often considered the most rational approach, directly linking planning with resource allocation to achieve specific health objectives and outcomes.
The Budget Cycle - Fiscal Flow Steps
A systematic, iterative process for managing public finances and resource allocation.
- 1. Budget Formulation:
- Ministries prepare financial estimates (revenue & expenditure).
- Finance Ministry compiles and finalizes draft budget.
- 2. Budget Approval (Enactment):
- Budget presented to Legislature (Parliament/State Assembly).
- Discussion, committee scrutiny, voting on Demands for Grants.
- Appropriation Bill (authorizes withdrawal) & Finance Bill (taxation) passed.
- 3. Budget Execution:
- Allocated funds disbursed to departments.
- Expenditure incurred per provisions; adherence monitored.
- 4. Budget Audit & Evaluation:
- Accounts audited (e.g., CAG for financial propriety).
- Performance evaluation: assessing program efficiency, effectiveness.
- Feedback for future budget cycles.

⭐ "Rule of Lapse": Unspent budget allocations expire end of fiscal year (March 31st in India), ensuring timely spending.
Indian Health Budgeting - Policies & Pitfalls
- National Health Policy (NHP) 2017: Aims to ↑ public health expenditure to 2.5% of GDP.
- Key Influencers:
- 15th Finance Commission: Recommended ↑ health spending by states.
- NITI Aayog: Policy think tank, influences resource allocation.
- Funding Sources:
- Central Government: Major schemes (NHM, Ayushman Bharat PM-JAY).
- State Governments: Primary constitutional responsibility for health.
- Pitfalls:
- Chronic underfunding: Actual spend often < 1.5% GDP.
- Inequitable distribution: Rural-urban & inter-state disparities persist.
- Implementation gaps & absorptive capacity issues.
- High out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE) burden.

⭐ India's public health expenditure as a percentage of GDP has consistently been low, around 1.2-1.5%, significantly below the NHP 2017 target of 2.5% and the WHO recommended 5% of GDP for health spending by governments of developing countries to achieve Universal Health Coverage goals by 2030.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- The health budget cycle is typically annual, covering formulation, sanction, execution, and parliamentary audit.
- Zero-Based Budgeting (ZBB) mandates annual justification of all expenditures from a zero base.
- Performance Budgeting allocates funds based on achieving specific outcomes and results.
- Out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE) is the dominant component of India's Total Health Expenditure.
- National Health Mission (NHM) significantly influences public health budget allocations and program implementation.
- Budgets distinguish between Capital expenditure (long-term assets) and Revenue expenditure (operational costs).
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