HEALTH DECENTRALISATION: BEYOND THE FAULT LINES
It was in a meeting abroad that I was first posed this question by a fellow Pakistani: ‘Don’t you think the health sector has suffered because of decentralisation? Don’t you think we’d be better off if health became a federal subject again? What’s the point of decentralisation if people aren’t benefitting?’
I wondered at the argument back then. Wrap up decentralisation? Why not address the lacunae in the system instead?
Recent measures have fuelled the notion that there is more to the rolling back of decentralisation than meets the eye. And perhaps, this juncture, in time, provides us with the opportunity to critically assess whether decentralisation has helped health governance or impeded it, and if so, how.
Decentralisation is widely practiced across low- and middle-income countries and Pakistan is no exception to the rule. But typically the dialogue on decentralisation gets narrowly limited to health performance targets. What falls through the slats is that decentralisation is a radical political change with redistribution of responsibilities and resources — assessment of decentralisation is incomplete unless the process and politics of decentralisation are also examined. Which is why decentralisation results are unpredictable, depending on the context in which it is implemented.
Pakistan’s current provincial decentralisation came into effect with the passing of the 18th Amendment to the Constitution, on April 19, 2010. This was not a technical aseptic measure — with unanimous consensus of all political parliamentary parties, 21 sectors were devolved to the four provinces.
One of these was health — rather health was sent back to the provinces being constitutionally always a provincial subject but with blurring of federal-provincial authority lines over the years. The provinces were to now legislate, steer and manage the health sector as per their budgetary constraints.
Have they performed and can they deliver?
Preliminary results from the Demographic health Survey for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) health targets show that there has been reduction in deaths of infants and under-five-years children, coverage of pregnancy care visits by health providers has increased, skilled birth attendance has also gone up in all provinces, basic vaccinations coverage has increased in at least three provinces. But family planning targets have seen little improvement.
In the new debate surrounding the 18th Amendment, critics argue that benefits are not being transferred on to citizens. But such blanket assertions don’t take into account the politics and processes involved …
Let’s analyse health progress against some of the core objectives for which devolution was passed: (i) did devolution result in health getting a more equitable share of government funding? (ii) did provincial policy role lead to improvements in the health planning process? (iii) did provinces implement more locally responsive solutions?
But we must not confuse mix this with the prior attempts at decentralisation — these were attempted as part of local government reforms in 1959, 1979 and 2001. The case of weak local government absorptive capacity, low revenue generation and potential for domination by chieftains in a tribalistic society, has already been well documented by development economists. At least in health, the last district decentralisation led to little increase in the MDG targets, in certain places even a reversal.
WHAT IS HEALTH DECENTRALISATION?