Audio By Carbonatix
The Chief Executive Officer of the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA), Dr. Dacosta Aboagye, has refuted claims that the NHIA is bankrupt.
Dr. Aboagye highlighted the robust financial position of the NHIA, indicating that the authority pays out between GH₵180 million and GH₵250 million monthly.
He noted that such a level of expenditure would not be possible if the NHIA were indeed bankrupt.
Speaking on the JoyNews’ AM show, he stated that. “It can never be bankrupt; a scheme paying between one-hundred-and-eighty and two-hundred-and-fifty million can never be bankrupt, but there is also the case that the Ministry of Finance should release the funds to the NHIS: once we have constant release, then we would not have problems, and it is sustainable.”
In response to host Benjamin Akakpo's inquiry about how often the Finance Ministry releases funds for its operations, Dr. Dacosta Aboagye stated that... “I was conferred about some few weeks ago, but I think...... we are waiting for them to do the releases, but I think they will; the Minister has actually assured me that.”
The CEO of NHIA reassured the public that NHIA's funding will remain stable despite Ghana's engagement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the upcoming election year.
Dr. Aboagye explained that the NHIA's resources are not contingent upon the IMF's financial support and that the NHIS is protected under the IMF's social protection programme.
“At the end of the day, you are paying, and I am paying, so all we know is that our father does have money, and our father should release the money. I think social protection is very important; we cannot put the vulnerable in distress, and I believe that the ministry of finances would do the needful by releasing the funds to us. I have no doubt, obviously to doubt. I do not have any doubt that they would obviously release the funds to us to make the payments."
Latest Stories
-
2026 is the ‘Year of Action’ for Petroleum Hub project – Dr Toni Aubynn
22 minutes -
Sedina Tamakloe set for January 21 US court hearing – Victor Smith
43 minutes -
‘Ministerial signature is not ceremonial ink’ – CDM questions Education Minister’s role in curriculum saga
52 minutes -
Multimedia Group Kumasi staff gathers to celebrate 31 years of broadcasting and community service
56 minutes -
Bryan Acheampong is our ‘Kivo gari’, a ready leader for NPP – Pious Hadzie insists
57 minutes -
I dismissed the former ‘Ayalolo’ boss for failing to expand fleet – Local Gov’t Minister
58 minutes -
“Our PC candidates beat our presidential candidate” – Bryan Acheampong calls for unifying candidate to lead NPP
1 hour -
Gov’t seeks €1m spanish grant to expand ‘Ayalolo’ bus fleet – Local Gov’t Minister
1 hour -
Little Angels Trust donates to children admitted at Cape Coast Metropolitan Hospital
1 hour -
Victor Smith refutes claims Sedina Tamakloe is not in Nevada Detention Centre in US
1 hour -
“Let our boast be in Him ”alone”—Multimedia CEO to staff at thanksgiving service
1 hour -
US tightens border security as immigrant visa freeze hits 75 nations, including African allies
1 hour -
The invisible wall between Ghana’s economic gains, household reality
2 hours -
Hannah Affum: Breaking Barriers with Radiotracers and Resilience
2 hours -
CDM calls out institutional failures over controversial SHS curriculum
2 hours
