[Answered] Analyze the paradox of rising health insurance coverage alongside persistent financial distress. Evaluate why government-funded schemes fail to reduce out-of-pocket expenditure.

Introduction

NSS 80th Round (January–December 2025) reveals India’s sharpest health paradox: insurance coverage has risen to 47.4% rural and 44.3% urban households, yet OOP hospitalisation expenditure has more than doubled since 2017–18.

The Paradox of Coverage without Financial Protection

  1. Expansion of Government-Financed Health Insurance (GFHI): Government-financed schemes like PMJAY drove a two-and-a-half-fold increase in coverage since 2017-18.
  2. Rising Coverage, Limited Utilisation: Insurance coverage rose significantly (≈45%), yet hospitalisation rates remain stagnant or declining, especially in urban areas. Indicates paper coverage vs real access gap (card vs care).
  3. Shift towards Costlier Private Sector: 57% insured patients prefer private hospitals due to perceived quality deficits in public facilities. Results in higher expenditure despite insurance (private preference).
  4. Escalating Out-of-Pocket (OOP) Burden: NSS data: OOP expenditure has more than doubled (2017–2025). Avg. costs: ₹31,000+ rural, ₹34,000+ urban even after coverage (hidden billing).

Why Government-Funded Schemes Fail

  1. Structural Design Limitations
  2. Hospitalisation-Centric Model: Schemes like Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana focus on inpatient care only. But ~65–70% health spending is on OPD, medicines, diagnostics. Example: OPD burden.
  3. Inadequate Coverage Depth: ₹5 lakh ceiling insufficient for critical illnesses amid medical inflation (~12–14%). Leads to underinsurance phenomenon. Example: coverage exhaustion.
  4. Market Failures in Private Healthcare
  5. Unregulated Pricing & Extra Billing: Private hospitals charge above package rates; patients pay difference. Weak regulation converts insurance into subsidy for providers.
  6. Supply-Induced Demand: Insurance increases unnecessary tests/procedures in profit-driven settings. Inflates costs beyond coverage limits.
  7. Governance & Implementation Gaps
  8. Delayed Reimbursements: States spend up to 15% of health budgets on GFHIs → delays to hospitals. Hospitals shift burden to patients.
  9. Administrative & Awareness Barriers: Poor awareness, digital exclusion, and documentation hurdles limit access. Poor unable to utilise schemes effectively.
  10. Social & Equity Concerns
  11. Regressive Benefit Distribution: Only ~13% of beneficiaries in urban areas belong to poorest groups. Better-off exploit schemes due to informational advantage. Example: elite capture.
  12. Geographic & Infrastructure Inequality: Empanelled hospitals concentrated in urban areas. Rural poor face access barriers.
  13. Public Health System Weakness
  14. Underfunded Public Infrastructure: Shortage of medicines, diagnostics → forces private spending even in public hospitals. Leads to dual expenditure burden.
  15. Neglect of Preventive & Primary Care: Weak investment in Health & Wellness Centres/Ayushman Arogya Mandirs. Increases long-term hospitalisation demand.

Way Forward

  1. Shift from “Insurance-led” to “System-led” Model: Strengthen public hospitals as primary providers.
  2. Expand Coverage to OPD & Medicines: Free essential drugs and diagnostics. Example: Tamil Nadu model.
  3. Price Regulation: Implement strict regulation and standardised pricing in empanelled private hospitals.
  4. Strengthen Primary Healthcare: Scale Ayushman Arogya Mandirs for preventive care.
  5. Improve Targeting & Equity: Focus subsidies on poorest; reduce inclusion errors.
  6. Digital Health Ecosystem: Integrate schemes with Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM).

Conclusion

As Dr. B.R. Ambedkar held: “Political democracy cannot last unless there lies at the base of it social democracy.” A health card is not health security until public systems are strong enough to be the default, insurance will remain a subsidy for private profit, not a shield for the poor.

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