Amend COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy Act to ensure funds for public health emergencies

A year into Ghana’s fight to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, the country passed the COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy Act, 2021 (ACT 1068) to impose a special levy on the supply of goods and services and imports.

This is to raise revenue to support COVID-19 expenditures and to provide for related matters.

At the time, the government had already committed a lot of funds derived mainly from loans, and grants from donor partners into fighting the disease.

The passage of this law represented a move to establish a reliable source of funds for the continuing fight against the pandemic.

The nature of this law implies that when the pandemic is over, the country will cease to collect this levy. However, the COVID-19 pandemic is not the only disease of public health concern and will not also be the last.

Even during the COVID-19 pandemic, the country recorded outbreaks of polio, cerebrospinal meningitis (CSM) and yellow fever, which also spread quickly resulting in loss of lives especially in the case of CSM and yellow fever.

In view of this, and against the background that the country does not have a reliable source of funds to support her Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response (IDSR) plan and or epidemic preparedness activities, it will be important to amend this law to establish a major fund, which will yield resources towards epidemic preparedness financing in the country.

Potential of the proposed COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy Act amendment

The COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy Act imposes a one per cent levy on selected supply of goods and services.

In 2021, it generated approximately $144 million representing 11 per cent of the budgetary allocation to the country’s health sector, showing that it has the potential to rake in the resources for the intended purpose.

The country cannot afford to stop collecting this levy when COVID-19 is over. That is why this Act needs to be amended to broaden its scope beyond COVID-19 pandemic to include all the public health emergency concerns.

During the amendment, the levy could be raised from the current one per cent to about two per cent. Also, apart from targeting the supply of goods and services, other lucrative sectors of the economy such as telecommunications could be targeted.

The measures, with an increase in business activities and projected expansion of the economy could offer a reliable source of funds to support routine IDSR activities and for that matter Epidemic Preparedness and Response (EPR) financing.

Challenges in implementing EPR in Ghana

Over the past couple of years, funding for routine disease surveillance activities (ISDR) has dwindled. Budgetary allocations to the health sector go into emoluments for health staff, and construction of health facilities, leaving significantly less resource available to undertake routine disease surveillance activities.

This implies that diseases that could be detected and managed on time will be left to degenerate into an epidemic level with their devastating consequences on the population.

Last year, the total national health budget was $1.30 billion (about $4 per person in the US). This budget included payment of salaries, health research amongst others.

Out of the figure, $803 million was expected to be spent on health delivery, and $9 million on goods and services. EPR fell under the goods and services budget. This was woefully inadequate considering the volume of work expected under the EPR.

Madam Elizabeth Tindan, Tamale Metropolitan Public Health Nurse shared her experience with the Ghana News Agency regarding the fight against the COVID-19 saying “For the COVID-19, because the funds were not there, when COVID-19 emerged, we, the staff, bought veronica buckets for our office, used our clothes to sew facemasks to use during our public engagements before support started coming in from government and civil society organisations.”

Madam Tindan’s risk taking experience could have been avoided if such fund existed long before outbreaks like Covid -19 raised its ugly head.

Mr Iddrisu Mohammed Kamil, Senior Development Planning Officer at Yendi Municipal Assembly, also shared his experience about lack of dedicated funds to fight epidemics at the Assembly, saying “actually, it was difficult when COVID-19 was recorded.

“We were concentrating on our usual District Assemblies’ Common Fund (DACF) and internally generated funds (IGF). We are facing problems in raising IGF and even if they are raised, there is already pressure on them. So, it was not easy until the DACF came from government, and it assisted us in coming out to set up the Public Health Emergency Committees, who stepped up the efforts in sensitisation and provision of personal protective equipment” to aid the fight against the pandemic in the municipality.

Mr Mumuni Mohammed, Northern Regional Programme Manager of SEND-GHANA, spoke about the need to establish a dedicated fund for fighting epidemics in the country “The emergence of COVID-19 pandemic has really exposed us. The structures to fight epidemics are not working because of lack of funds. We have seen that countries that have strong structures backed with funds have been able to go through the pandemic and their economies have rebounded. We need a reliable source of funds for EPR.”

The way forward

When the country deemed it important to expand educational infrastructure, she introduced the Ghana Education Trust Fund to generate the needed funds for that cause.

Likewise, she introduced the National Health Insurance Scheme to take care of clinical care to abolish cash and carry in health care delivery.

As has been witnessed over the years, diseases will continue to come.

Therefore, the country needs to prepare by strengthening her IDSR system through ensuring sustained availability of funds for that purpose. Therefore, there is a need to amend the COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy Act to broaden its scope, increase the levy and target other sectors to ensure reliable funds towards fighting outbreaks to protect the population.

By Albert Futukpor

Source: GNA

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Shares