LAHORE: The government spent less than one per cent of gross domestic product on the health sector during the outgoing fiscal year against the world average of 9.9pc of GDP.
Expenditures on health sector during 2016-17 remained as little as 0.46pc of the GDP, reveals the Economic Survey of Pakistan released by Finance Minister Ishaq Dar on Thursday.
“During current fiscal year (July-March) 2016-17, the [health sector] expenditures remain at Rs145.97 billion showing an increase of 9 per cent over the same period of last year.”
The ratio is in line with the last 10 years pattern as it never reached the one per cent of GDP mark. Rather from 0.54pc of the GDP in 2006-07 it gradually dropped down to 0.23pc in 2010-11 and then recovered to the maximum of 0.72pc in 2014-15.
The survey admits that health spending is slow but “persistently rising” though much below the bench mark set by the World Health Organisation (WHO) for low-income countries.
“The country is spending 0.5 to 0.8pc of its GDP on health over the last 10 years. These percentages are less than the WHO bench mark of at least 6pc of GDP required to provide basic and life saving services.”
Quoting the World Bank’s latest report, it says “[C]urrently Pakistan’s per capita health spending is $36.2 which is below than the WHO’s low income countries bench mark of $86.”
Pakistan Medical Association, the parent body of medical community in the country, laments that Pakistan is spending even less than war-torn neighbouring country Afghanistan.