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HomeHealthNigeria: The Advocates Decry Declining Health Funding, Call For Urgent Supplementary Budget

Nigeria: The Advocates Decry Declining Health Funding, Call For Urgent Supplementary Budget

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The Advocates
The Advocates in a group photograph with Nigeria’s Minister of Health

 

The National Advocates for Health (NA4H), a Nigerian health advocacy group, has called on President Muhammadu Buhari to increase health budget and ensures timely releases in 2018.

To this end, the group wants as a matter of urgency, a supplementary Budget on health to be submitted to the National Assembly to raise it’s percentage to at least 7% this year and subsequent 1% annual increase.

The group assures its commitment to tracking the implementation of the Basic Health Care Provision Fund (HUWE) using an accountability framework.

These are part of the resolutions adopted at a one day Symposium on “framing for advocacy and accountability for effective implementation of 2018 National Health Budget, Basic Health Care Provision Fund (BHCPF) and Global Financing Facility (GFF) convened by the group on Tuesday in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital.

The group chaired by Professor Dapo Ladipo observed with concern the decline in Nigeria’s  budgetary allocation to the health sector, contrary to its commitment to the 2001 Abuja Declaration.

Below is the full text of the Resolution:

“The 2018 approved budget is about N9.12 trillion out of that N356 billion is earmarked for health which represents 3.9%. When compared to the 2017 health budget, which was an aggregate sum of N308.464 billion being 4.15% of the 2017 approved budget; the Federal Government commitment to the 2001 Abuja declaration of allocating at least 15% of total national budget to health is declining rather than improving.

“The 2018 approved budget has earmarked in the health capital expenditure the sum of N55.15b  to the Basic Health Care Provision Fund (BHCPF), while this is commendable , however we notice that it is not captured as a statutory transfer as provided by section 11 of the National Health Act, 2014.

 Funds in the statutory transfers are always prioritized as they are not largely affected by scarcity of funds. Not committing the BHCPF as statutory, means if there is any paucity of funds within the year, it will suffer severe budget cuts and poor implementation as the section 28 of the Fiscal Responsibility Act has empower the Minister of Finance on budgetary matters as follows “Where, by the end of three months, after the enactment of the Appropriation Act, the Minister determines that the targeted revenues may be insufficient to fund the heads of expenditure in the Appropriation Act, the Minister shall, within the next 30 days of such determination, take appropriate measures to restrict further commitments and financial operations according to the criteria set-in the Fiscal Risk Appendix ——- such provisions shall not apply to Statutory or constitutional expenditure.”

“As a matter of urgency, we call on President Muhammadu Buhari to submit a supplementary health budget to the National Health Assembly in order to raise its percentage to at least 7.5% this year and in subsequent years raise the budget by 1% point increase. The president is called upon to also direct his Minister of Finance to release the N55.15 billion at once earmarked for the Basic Health Care Provision Fund and when commencing 2019 budgetary process to ensure it is captured as a statutory transfer.

 

https://www.africaprimenews.com/2018/05/15/news/nigeria-federal-government-partners-kwara-others-on-adolescents-health-issues/

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