By Abujah Racheal
Dr Ebere Okereke, an Independent Global Health Expert, has urged African Governments to treat health spending as a strategic economic investment rather than a social cost or burden.
Okereke, also an Associate Fellow of Chatham House, told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Sunday that governments must rethink how health financing was presented during national budgets and policy discussions.
According to her, health is often framed primarily in humanitarian or social terms, making it more vulnerable to cuts when governments face competing fiscal pressures.
“Governments need to change how they make the case for health in budget and policy discussions.
“Instead of presenting health mainly in terms of need, they should present it in terms of economic return, labour productivity, resilience and the cost of inaction.”
She said underinvestment in primary care, prevention and health system preparedness often led to greater long-term costs through disease outbreaks, loss of workforce productivity, household impoverishment and expensive emergency responses.
She noted that reframing health financing as part of economic policy could make it easier for governments to prioritise the sector even during periods of fiscal constraint.
The expert also stressed that health financing discussions must extend beyond ministries of health.
“Health financing should not remain only a Ministry of Health issue,” she said.
She explained that ministries of finance, planning, labour and heads of government must recognise the strong link between health systems and national economic performance.
“When health is linked to workforce participation, human capital, fiscal risk and social stability, it becomes easier to defend in tight budgets and harder to treat as a discretionary social cost,” she said.
Inspite decades of commitments to strengthen health systems across Africa, Okereke said the core challenge often lied not in resource availability but in governance and implementation.
“The first reform is to move from allocation to execution.
“In many countries, money is approved for health but is not spent well, or sometimes not spent at all,” she said.
She said improving budget execution, strengthening procurement transparency and reinforcing public financial management systems were essential for translating allocations into real improvements in health services.
According to her, accountability mechanisms must also involve institutions beyond the executive arm of government.
“This is not only a technical problem; it is also a political one.
“The issue is often not knowledge, but weak incentives and limited accountability and that is why parliaments, audit institutions, civil society and the private sector also matter.”
With global development assistance for health becoming increasingly uncertain, she said African governments should prioritise domestic financing mechanisms that are already known and feasible.
She identified health levies, excise taxes on tobacco, alcohol and sugary drinks, as well as insurance pooling arrangements, as potential sources of sustainable funding for health systems.
“Health levies, excise taxes, insurance pooling arrangements and other ring-fenced instruments can all play a role,” she said.
She added that debt-for-health swaps could also be useful in certain contexts, although their complexity makes them less likely to serve as a broad financing solution across the continent.
“The issue is not a lack of financing ideas.
“Proven mechanisms already exist, but they are unevenly governed, inconsistently scaled and insufficiently embedded in national systems,” she said.
She emphasised that strong governance structures were essential for these financing instruments to succeed.
“These instruments work only when they have a clear legal basis, transparent reporting, independent oversight and protection against diversion and inflation erosion,” she said.
She further noted that improving the use of funds already approved in national budgets could provide one of the fastest ways to strengthen health financing.
“In the current context of tight fiscal space, high debt servicing and declining external assistance, improving budget execution may be one of the fastest and most practical ways to strengthen health financing,” she said.
On the role of data in policy decisions, Okereke said governments must ensure that evidence was not only generated but also used effectively in budgeting and planning processes.
“Governments need to make evidence usable, not just available,” she said.
She recommended that countries began by realistically costing a defined package of essential health services and using that information to guide budget decisions.
She also called for stronger integration between routine health data, National Health Accounts, private-sector service data and fiscal planning.
“Reforms become more credible when they are based on country-owned evidence, realistic assumptions and clear priorities rather than aspirational plans or external preferences,” she said.(NAN)(www.nannews.ng)
AIR/SH
Edited by Sadiya Hamza











