Has health spending by the Centre increased?

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Has Health Spending by the Centre Increased?

UPSC Study Note | GS-II | Health Policy & Governance


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2005 National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) launched — first major Centre-led push for rural health infrastructure
2013 NRHM merged into National Health Mission (NHM) covering urban health too
2014-15 Govt Health Expenditure as % of GDP: 1.13%; Centre's share in total govt health spending: 28.6% [S2]
2017 National Health Policy 2017 adopted — targets 2.5% of GDP, Centre to hold 40% share [S4]
2019 Govt share in total health expenditure: 40.6% (up from 28.6% in FY14) [S2]
2020-22 COVID-19 pandemic — temporary spike in health spending; States led post-COVID sustenance [S4]
2021-22 Total Health Expenditure: ₹9,04,461 crore (3.8% of GDP, ₹6,602 per capita) [S1]
2023-24 Government health expenditure reached 1.9% of GDP [S1]
2025 NHP 2017 deadline — target missed; Centre's share still far below 1% of GDP [S4]

Predecessor initiatives: Bhore Committee Report (1946) first recommended comprehensive public health system; National Health Policy 1983 & 2002 preceded NHP 2017.


4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Federalism

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. NHP 2017 target: Increase government health expenditure from 1.15% to 2.5% of GDP by 2025. [S4]
  2. The National Health Policy 2017 stipulated the Centre's share should be 40% of total public health spending. [S4]
  3. This implies the Centre's spending must rise from ~0.29% to ~1% of GDP — a 3× increase required. [S4]
  4. Government share in total health expenditure rose from 29% (FY15) to 48% (FY22) — per Economic Survey 2024-25. [S1]
  5. Centre's share in total government health spending rose from 28.6% (FY14) to 40.6% (FY19). [S2]
  6. Total Health Expenditure in FY22: ₹9,04,461 crore = 3.8% of GDP (₹6,602 per capita). [S1]
  7. Government health expenditure in FY24: approximately 1.9% of GDP. [S1]
  8. MoHFW Budget 2025-26: ₹37,227 crore (3% higher than revised FY25 estimates). [S3]
  9. CAGR of MoHFW expenditure from 2016-17 to 2024-25: 12%. [S3]
  10. India's per capita health spending is ~2.5× less than Bhutan and ~3× less than Sri Lanka (2021). [S4]
  11. All other BRICS nations spent 14-15× more per capita on health than India (2021). [S4]
  12. COVID-19 vaccination spending was routed through the Finance Ministry, not MoHFW — inflating apparent pandemic health expenditure. [S3]
  13. Health is in the State List (Entry 6, Schedule VII) of the Constitution — Centre's direct spending is structurally limited.
  14. Article 47 (DPSP) places public health improvement as a constitutional obligation on the State.
  15. The 15th Finance Commission also recommended reaching 2.5% of GDP for combined Centre-State health spending. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper GS-II: Government Policies and Interventions; Health; Issues relating to federalism
Syllabus Headings "Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health"; "Centre-State fiscal relations"

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Critically examine India's progress towards the National Health Policy 2017 targets, with special reference to the Union government's contribution to public health expenditure." 2. "Despite Constitutional mandate under Article 47 and NHP 2017 commitments, India's public health spending remains abysmally low. Analyse the structural reasons and suggest remedies." 3. "The divergence between Centre and States in post-pandemic health spending reveals a fundamental asymmetry in India's cooperative federalism. Discuss."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Linked
National Health Mission (NHM) Primary vehicle for Centre's health transfers to States; funding structure directly relevant
Ayushman Bharat – PM-JAY Centre's flagship health insurance scheme; demand-side vs. supply-side spending debate
National Health Policy 2017 Foundational document; all targets and commitments flow from here
15th Finance Commission Recommendations Recommended 2.5% GDP target; shapes Centre-State fiscal transfers for health
Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) in India Consequence of low public spending; directly tested in GS-II and Data-based questions
Centre-State Relations (Fiscal Federalism) Health's State List status; vertical imbalance; conditional grants mechanism
National Health Accounts (NHA) Statistical framework tracking health expenditure; source data for all these figures
Comparative Healthcare Systems (BRICS, SDG-3) India's performance vis-à-vis comparable nations; SDG Goal 3 linkage

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing total government health expenditure with Centre-only spending: The 1.9% of GDP (FY24) figure is the combined Centre + States figure — the Centre alone contributes only ~0.29% of GDP. Examiners exploit this distinction. [S1][S4]
  2. Assuming NHP 2017 target was met: The 2025 deadline has passed and the target is not met — do not conflate the "48% govt share in total health expenditure" improvement (largely State-driven) with meeting the 2.5% GDP target. [S1][S4]
  3. Misattributing COVID health spending: Pandemic vaccination expenditure was under the Finance Ministry, not MoHFW — do not treat the pandemic spike as a genuine upscaling of MoHFW's health mandate. [S3]
  4. Health as a Union subject: Health is in the State List (Entry 6), not the Union List. Central schemes (NHM, PM-JAY) operate as Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS) — not direct Centre spending on a Union subject.
  5. NHP 2017 vs. NHP 2002: There are two prior National Health Policies (1983 and 2002). NHP 2017 is the operative policy; confusing their targets or years is a common MCQ trap.

11. Sources