TY - JOUR
T1 - Governing healthcare in India
T2 - a policy capacity perspective
AU - Bali, Azad Singh
AU - Ramesh, M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2021.
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - After decades of neglect, in 2008, the Indian government launched a national health insurance programme to address the needs of the bulk of the population that could not afford healthcare. This was followed by the launch of another national programme in 2018 that further expanded insurance coverage. These schemes envision a large single-payer, insurance-based system covering about 110 million families. The central objective of this article is to assess the government’s capacity to implement these ambitious programmes. We employ the policy capacity framework developed by Wu et al. to examine the types of capacities needed to achieve desired objectives in the health sector. The central argument of the article is that there are critical capacity deficits, especially along operational dimensions. Our conclusions are generalisable to other middle-income countries currently in the process of implementing similar prospective-payment health policy reforms. Points for practitioners: This article highlights the need for governments to prioritise the capacity for implementing health policy reforms. Efforts to achieve and sustain universal healthcare are contingent not only on appropriate policy design, mobilising required resources and building political support, but also on overcoming capacity deficits in implementation. The framework presented in this article serves as a useful tool for governments to diagnose strengths and weaknesses in the specific types of capacities (analytical, operational, and political) needed for universal health coverage.
AB - After decades of neglect, in 2008, the Indian government launched a national health insurance programme to address the needs of the bulk of the population that could not afford healthcare. This was followed by the launch of another national programme in 2018 that further expanded insurance coverage. These schemes envision a large single-payer, insurance-based system covering about 110 million families. The central objective of this article is to assess the government’s capacity to implement these ambitious programmes. We employ the policy capacity framework developed by Wu et al. to examine the types of capacities needed to achieve desired objectives in the health sector. The central argument of the article is that there are critical capacity deficits, especially along operational dimensions. Our conclusions are generalisable to other middle-income countries currently in the process of implementing similar prospective-payment health policy reforms. Points for practitioners: This article highlights the need for governments to prioritise the capacity for implementing health policy reforms. Efforts to achieve and sustain universal healthcare are contingent not only on appropriate policy design, mobilising required resources and building political support, but also on overcoming capacity deficits in implementation. The framework presented in this article serves as a useful tool for governments to diagnose strengths and weaknesses in the specific types of capacities (analytical, operational, and political) needed for universal health coverage.
KW - India
KW - health reform
KW - health systems, health policy
KW - healthcare governance
KW - policy capacity
KW - universal coverage
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85104135954&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/00208523211001499
DO - 10.1177/00208523211001499
M3 - Article
SN - 0020-8523
VL - 87
SP - 275
EP - 293
JO - International Review of Administrative Sciences
JF - International Review of Administrative Sciences
IS - 2
ER -