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WELCOME. By Prof.S.Chakraborty Director Jaipuria Institute of Management Lucknow, INDIA. GOAL OF DEVELOPMENT. Social justice something that goes beyond Economic Growth. Development happens through. Income security Securities against contingencies Environmental security. From
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WELCOME By Prof.S.Chakraborty Director Jaipuria Institute of Management Lucknow, INDIA.
GOAL OF DEVELOPMENT Social justice something that goes beyond Economic Growth
Development happens through • Income security • Securities against contingencies • Environmental security
From Having people on rolls Job growth in the organized sector To Buying service from people. Job growth in the unorganized sector Shifts in Employment patterns
Fallouts • Lack of clear cut employer – employee relationship • Increasing income insecurity • Vulnerability of the workers
Social Security, social integration and health • Mortality, morbidity and life expectancy – all directly influenced by standards of living. • Strong association between income inequality and excess mortality. • Two – way casual relationship between health and wealth.
Need of the hour Social protection Eradication of problems not just prevention of a decline Sophisticated forms of targeting and monitoring Innovations in the social sector.
Health care delivery scene in India • Faced with the dual challenge of ‘diseases of poverty’ and ‘diseases of prosperity’ • Real vs articulated demand • Public spending ratio is 1:3 between the poorest 20% and the richest 20%
Estimates of household expenditures/treatment costs per episode/per year in India
Key challenges • Creating efficiently targeted policies with widespread public participation • Integration of social and economic policies • Keeping the cost of administration low • ‘Prevention’ against increases in deprivation
‘Promotion’ of better chances of individual development • Intensifying focus towards ‘needy’ (contribution or no contribution) • Shifting away from large scale universal systems
Need of a focus shift in social security in order to • enhance and protect peoples’ capabilities • provide benefits through public or collective arrangements • help people to cope with various insecurity dimensions - poverty levels - casualization of employment - gender inequality • improve opportunities and choices before individuals.
Poverty Poverty is not just a state of deprivation. It is equally a state of vulnerability
Market – oriented interventions in the health sector Does the assumption of ‘perfect market’ work? Perhaps can work only when – those with greatest need are also those with most resources
Key assumptions in market functioning • Perfect information • Free entry and exit • Fair distribution of income with all having an ability to pay
Scenario in Health Sector Wide range of market failures because of • high element of risk and uncertainty • moral hazard • adverse selection • externalities • assymetrical distribution of income
The big question Does the market – oriented health – care systems actually work?
Health care through social security schemes Displayed characteristics • Have an urban orientation • Caters to those in the organized sector
Employees covered under different system (number in millions)
Low – income organized sector workers • For these workers there is a mandatory, contributory scheme known as Employee State Insurance Scheme (ESIS) run by Employee State Insurance Corporation (ESIC) • As on March 31, 2006, ESIC covered around 8.5 million insured persons/family units
Notable features of ESIS • Workers with a salary of less than Rs.10000 per month can join • Workers earning less than Rs.50 a day (approximately $ 1) are exempt from contributing
Quality of Service Some common complaints are • long queues • non – availability of good quality medicines • problems with reimbursement • non – availability of service in certain geographical regions
Health security • Requires to ensure low exposure to risk • Provides access to healthcare services along with ability to pay
Burden of treatment Equals Cost of treatment + loss of income However Little attention has been paid to the burden factor
Does health insurance answers the need? • Perhaps yes, for those who can afford to pay when they are healthy • Apparently no, when it comes to the poorer section
Social security needs in developing countries • To ensure that members of the society meet their basic needs as well as remain protected from contingencies. • To enable members maintain a standard of living consistent with social norms.
What does it call for? Greater emphasis on social justice and social rehabilitation not limited to only medical rehabilitation.
Envisaged needs • Innovations in social sectors to make life better for our millions • Focus on indigenous development with local expertise on local problems with local content of local relevance • To create economic and social developments from below
Recent Developments • Universal health insurance scheme of Govt. of India (focussed on BPL section) • Yeshasvani Co-operative health care scheme in Karnataka (mainly focussed on farmers) • Innovations in Arvind eye care centre, Madurai, Tamil Nadu (brought down the cost of cataract operations) • Kudumbashree programme in Kerala (state poverty eradication mission) • Grassroots innovation augmentation programme (GIAN) • ………… and many more
Efforts of late ……. are in the right direction
India is on the move showing signs that • People have learnt to escape from old ideas • Serious note has been taken of what Amartya Sen had said, “Development without participation is a sin.”
As a consequence ‘I’ in India has started changing It is no longer • Immitation and inhibition Instead it is • Innovation and Creation of value from ideas