Budget Execution in Health
Most countries are committed to the provision of quality health services to all, without risk of financial hardship. Adequate budget provisions are an important, yet insufficient requirement in this pursuit. The budget also needs to be implemented in full and with regard to efficiency and accountabi...
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Report |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext bestellen |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | Most countries are committed to the
provision of quality health services to all, without risk of
financial hardship. Adequate budget provisions are an
important, yet insufficient requirement in this pursuit. The
budget also needs to be implemented in full and with regard
to efficiency and accountability. While this is widely
acknowledged, there is no systematic evidence on how well
the health budget is implemented and literature remains thin
on how budget execution practices relate to health financing
functions and service delivery. This report is the first in
a series of publications on the topic following an active
World Health Organization and World Bank collaboration. It
aims to define concepts, characteristics and trends in
health sector budget execution. The report first calls for
clarity in use of terminology. It helps to differentiate
between ‘budget execution rates’ and ‘budget execution
practices’. The former refers to the share of the budget
being executed. The latter to processes on how well the
budget is executed. Both aspects are equally important. Not
implementing the budget in full is a lost opportunity,
efficiency and accountability concern and undermines the
health sector’s ability to deliver services. It also
undermines prospects for increased fiscal space going
forward. To identify trends and patterns in over and
underspending, the report draws on previously unexplored
PEFA annex and World Bank BOOST data. This reveals the
following: Health budget execution rates are inversely
related to levels of income and maturity of PFM systems.
Health budget under-execution is particularly pervasive in
LMICs where the budget is executed at around 85-90 percent.
Some countries have chronic budget execution problems where
the budget is executed at a rate below 85 percent across
consecutive years. In LMICs, the health budget is
systematically implemented at a lower rate than the general
government budget. This means, that governments are
effectively deprioritizing health during budget
implementation. For Sub-Saharan Africa countries in the
sample, the average health budget was 6.7 percent of the
general government budget. Health spending as a share of
general government spending was half a percentage point less
at 6.2 percent. In some countries this is much more
pronounced, where health is deprioritized by 2-3 percentage
points of general government spending during implementation.
The health budget was also implemented at a lower rate than
the educati |
---|