Audio By Carbonatix
The government indebtedness to the Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) has reduced the Trust investment earnings and jeopardize its already doubtful ability to pay future pensions.
This is a revelation by a World Bank study titled “Social Protection Programme Spending and Household Welfare in Ghana”.
The report revealed that the government failed to pay more than GH¢3 billion it owed to SSNIT for its employees’ premia over the previous decade.
“An important observation from many situs slot gacor operational reviews and the press is that the government has a pervasive and chronic problem: It often accumulates substantial arrears to its service providers. Over the previous decade, the government failed to pay more than GH¢3 billion it owed to SSNIT for its employees’ premia”.
The report also pointed out that the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) is so slow to reimburse health care providers that many now refuse to accept NHIS patients or charge them illegal copays.
The report also explained that SSNIT is also far from universal, highlighting that “In the past few years, it has tried to draw in more informal sector workers, but the response has been minimal’.
“Also, there is a lesson from the NHIS experience: The government probably cannot and will not fund a universal pension, so any expansion of membership will require actuarially fair premia payments from new members, something that will probably keep them from joining”, it added.
NHIS Presents Most Daunting Problems
The report continued that the NHIS presents the most daunting problems found in this study.
Unlike the other social protection programs, it stated that the NHIS is meant to be universal that is, to provide health insurance for all. Yet over the past 15 years, enrollment has been 30% to 40% of the population, but even with this reduced population coverage, NHIS has difficulty covering its expenses. “By far the most common criticism we found of https://full-measure.org/alumni/ any social protection program in Ghana is that NHIS pays health care providers late or not at all for the services they provide to NHIS members.
The report concluded that if NHIS is to be truly universal, it will need substantially more resources, more than twice its current outlay.
The authors of the report were Christabel Dadzie, Dhushyanth Raju and Stephen D. Younger.
Latest Stories
-
Parliament to probe SHS sports violence; sanctions to apply – Ntim Fordjour
21 minutes -
Upholding parental choice and respecting the ethos of faith-based schools in Ghana
23 minutes -
SHS assault: Produce students in 24 hours or we’ll storm your school – CID boss to SWESBUS Headmaster
47 minutes -
GSTEP inducts Greater Accra finalists, equips young innovators with critical skills for regional showdown
53 minutes -
CID boss warns against school violence after athletics attack in Swedru
1 hour -
Kotoka Int. Airport to introduce 3D scanners, end shoe removal for passengers
1 hour -
Mahama urges private sector participation in industrial water supply reforms
1 hour -
8 injured, 3 in critical condition after SHS violence – Awutu Senya DCE
1 hour -
Interior Minister supports prison inmates with Ramadan food donation
1 hour -
COA targets US$10m in investments for blue food sector through innovation hub
1 hour -
Manufacturing must contribute to 15% of GDP by 2030 – Mahama targets
1 hour -
Sports Minister orders NSA Director General to revoke 17 staff appointments over due process breach
1 hour -
Stabilisation alone won’t transform economy – Mahama
1 hour -
Aaron Kanor appointed Acting Commissioner of Customs
2 hours -
Ashanti police kill suspected robbery kingpin; four accomplices arrested
2 hours
