Resource Tracking and Management (RTM): State Level Results from Bihar ( to ) July 2017

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Resource Tracking and Management (RTM): State Level Results from Bihar (2007-08 to 2013-14) July 2017

The RTM Conceptual Framework Resource Mobilization Resource Allocation Resource Utilization Resource Productivity Resource Targeting What is the potential for raising more resources for health? From where? What determines the resource envelope at national and sub-national levels? How are funds allocated to different programs and functions at national and subnational levels? What factors determine the allocation to primary care? Are the allocated funds being utilized? What factors drive successful budget execution? What are the existing bottlenecks? How effectively are resources being translated into services? Is delivery efficient and what can be gained from efficiency improvements in terms of volume and quality? Are inputs benefiting the intended individuals and population? Is public spending reaching the poor?

Methods Financial data - Analysis is for years 2007-08 to 2013-14 Streams of financing analyzed Ø Treasury route (Funds pooled by the state from general taxation) Expenditures incurred Major codes 2210, 4210 (Medical and Public Health), 2211, 4211 (Family Welfare) under Demand for Grant no. 20 (Health Department) Ø GOI transfers (to SHS; and state treasury for infrastructure and maintenance for NHM) Ø GOI Other (Centrally sponsored schemes) Budget Tracking Tool developed by NHSRC endorsed by the MOHFW was used to estimate primary care. All of NHM is considered primary care for this study and analysis.

Identifying Primary Care Funding: NHSRC Tracking Toolkit Hierarchy Level Budget Lines/Heads Example with Code Example with Code Level 1 Major Head Medical and Public Health Revenue Expenditure Head (2210) Level 2 Sub-major Head Public Health Head (06) Level 3 Minor Head Prevention and Control of Diseases (101) Level 4 Sub-minor head National TB Program (04) Level 5 Detailed Head Drugs and Medicines (60) PRIMARY CARE

Sources and Routes Tracked for Health Funds Source Treasury Route Society Route Notes State Center (GOI) (1) State s own health budget (2) NHM funds for infrastructure & maintenance (3) Other Centrally Sponsored Schemes (4) State s share of NHM budget (5) GOI share of NHM budget (1) Allocation of tax revenues by the State Treasury to health and central revenues transfers to states (2) Approved NHM budget based on PIP transferred by GOI to State treasury (3) GOI contribution to health budget for CSS (non-nhm) (4) State contribution of 15% and now 25% of approved PIP transferred from state treasury to SHS (5) GOI contribution to NHM budget transferred to SHS

State Health Budget Total Health Budget (in Rs million) 147% Total Health Budget: 13,452 20,371 20,169 Rs 19,174 million (2007-08) 9,786 12,547 12,739 Rs 47,401 million (2013-14) 8,493 10,682 14,969 15,235 17,627 24,298 23,695 27,231 Increase of 147% over 7 years. 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 State Health Budget (excluding NHM)* NHM (all routes)**

NHM as a share of Total Health Budget Over the last 7 years On average NHM has contributed 42% of the THB 44% 40% 45% 42% 36% 46% 43% Bihar has among the highest dependency on NHM. Share of NHM in the THB was at its highest at 46% in 2012-13, 56% 60% 55% 58% 64% 54% 57% 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 State Health Budget (excluding NHM) NHM (all routes): approved budget

SGHB and TGHB as a share of GSDP 2.00% 1.80% 1.60% 1.40% 1.20% 1.00% 0.80% 0.60% 0.40% 0.20% 0.00% 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 SHB 1.17% 1.13% 1.02% 0.95% 1.08% 0.97% 0.93% THB 1.69% 1.74% 1.71% 1.49% 1.55% 1.50% 1.38% Declining trends in TGHB & SGHB as a share of GSDP, despite economy of the state witnessing among the highest growth trend in the country Substantial increase in demand for health services - Four fold increase in patient footfall in hospitals between 2007-08 & 2013-14 due to better infrastructure Bihar Economic Survey, 2014-15

Actual Government Expenditure on Health (Nominal) INDICATORS 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 Total Health Expenditure for Bihar (in Rs Millions) 14,720 19,439 18,677 23,028 26,898 30,411 34,036 State s share in THE (in Rs Millions) 12,622 (86%) 11,522 (59%) 13,294 (71%) 14,553 (63%) 18,744 (70%) 21,203 (70%) 22,615 (66%) NHM expenditure (in Rs Millions) 3,826 10,927 7,839 14,186 11,074 13,589 11,936 Per Capita THE (in Rs) 159 207 196 238 274 306 338 Total Primary Care Expenditure (State & NHM) 10,273 (70%) 14,109 (73%) 12,603 (67%) 17,049 (74%) 17,586 (65%) 20,278 (67%) 22,253 (65%) Per Capita Primary Care (in Rs) 111 150 132 176 179 204 221 THE as a percent of State GSDP 1.29 1.37 1.15 1.13 1.11 1.04 0.99 Primary Care Expenditure as percent of State GSDP 0.90% 0.99% 0.77% 0.84% 0.72% 0.69% 0.65%

Bihar Total Government Health Expenditure Average State s share in TGHE: 68 % 14% 41% 29% 37% 30% 30% 34% 86% 59% 71% 63% 70% 70% 66% 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 State share Center share

Bihar Total Health Expenditure (By route) Increase in expenditure : 131% over 7 years. Increase in budget : 147%. 11,936 11,074 13,589 3,826 10,894 10,927 7,839 8,512 10,839 14,186 8,842 15,825 16,822 22,100 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 State (Non NHM) NHM

Annual Growth Rate in Total Govt. Health Expenditure (by Source of Financing) 300% 250% 200% 150% 100% 50% 0% Annual Growth Rate in Health Expenditure by Sources -50% 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 State share -8.71% 15.38% 9.47% 28.80% 13.12% 6.66% Center share 277.29% -32.00% 57.42% -3.79% 12.93% 24.03% THE 32.06% -3.92% 23.29% 16.81% 13.06% 11.92% State share Center share THE

Total Government Per Capita Expenditure in Bihar 400 350 300 250 200 150 Per capita health expenditure one of the lowest in the country 23 159 207 84 56 196 88 238 83 274 306 93 338 113 100 50 136 122 139 150 191 213 225-2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 Per capita State Health Expenditure Per capita GoI expenditure on health Per capita Total Health Expenditure

Bihar Health Expenditures by Levels of Care (Treasury Only) in Rs. Million Allocations by Levels of Care 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 Primary Care 9,423 (68%) 7,575 (59%) 9,009 (60%) 10,693 (64%) 11,933 (56%) 13,851 (58%) 13,954 (54%) Secondary Care 1,603 1,831 1,852 1,673 2,976 3,342 3,752 Tertiary Care 1,189 1,767 1,936 2,083 2,555 2,536 2,785 Medical Education 1,286 1,358 1,734 1,994 3,077 3,341 4,613 Administration 370 375 552 229 705 914 633 Total 13,870 12,906 15,083 16,672 21,246 23,984 25,736 Per Capita Primary (Rs.) 82 68 71 100 91 99 102 Per Capita Primary (incl. NHM) (Rs.) 110 149 131 176 179 203 220

Bihar Expenditure by Levels of Care (Treasury Only - 7 years average) 2007-08 to 2013-14 Tertiary care 12% Medical Education 13% Secondary care 13% Primary care 59% Administration 3% Largest share (59%) of the health expenditure through Treasury route is on Primary Care

Comparing Growth Rates: Total Govt. Primary Health Exp. (TGPHE) & Total Govt. Health Expenditure (TGHE) 30% 20% 10% 0% -10% -20% -30% Comparing growth rate of TGPHE & TGHE 27% 19% 17% 19% 16% 12% 13% 11% 7% 1% 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 -7% -20% TPCE growth rate THE growth rate

Expenditure Allocation by Types of Inputs (Treasury Only) 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 HR comprises highest share of expenditure Drugs, pharmaceuticals & consumables range between 5% to 5.5% across all the 7 years Human Resource Operating Cost* Drugs & Pharmaceuticals Capital Projects Others**

Expenditure Allocation by Types of Inputs (NHM through State Health Society only) Areas where NHM has been able to make an impact on expenditure: Program / service delivery costs Drugs, pharmaceuticals & consumables Programs / Others include: Trainings, Service delivery, incentives, untied funds, IEC/BCC, monitoring and all other costs related to service delivery and program implementation under different components of NHM

Utilization Rates for Treasury Budgets (Expenditure in Rs. Million) Utilization Rate 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 Health Budget (Treasury) 13,316 17,588 18,151 21,175 28,438 31,027 34,481 Health Expenditure (Treasury) 13,870 12,906 15,083 16,672 21,246 23,984 25,736 Health Expenditure against budget* 104.17% 73.38% 83.1% 78.73% 74.71% 77.3% 74.64%

Utilization Rates for NHM (Expenditure in Rs. Million) Utilization Rate 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 Total NHM Approved budget 8,493 9,786 12,547 12,739 13,452 20,371 20,169 Total funds available under the NHM Scheme (opening balance, interest, funds transferred during the year) 8577 17,388 17,642 20,931 22,899 33,423 30,880 Total Expenditure Incurred 3,826 10,927 7,839 14,186 11,074 13,589 11,936 Utilization against approved budget for NHM (ENTIRE SCHEME) all routes: Total Expenditure/ total approved budget 45.05% 111.66% 62.47% 111.35% 82.32% 66.71% 59.18% Utilization against funds available for NHM (ENTIRE SCHEME) all routes: Total Expenditure/ total funds available 44.61% 62.84% 44.43% 67.77% 48.36% 40.66% 38.65%

NHM (SHS) underutilization IMPACT TGHE (in million Rs.) 1,60,000 1,40,000 1,20,000 1,00,000 80,000 60,000 40,000 Impact of State Health Society U;liza;on on Total Government Health Expenditure (TGHE) 34,036 50,595 1,19,650 1,50,370 If SHS spends 100% of funds available, increase in TGHE: Bihar: 49% UP: 26% 20,000 - Bihar 2013-14 UP 2014-15 Current TGHE TGHE if SHS spent 100%

Reasons for under spending: Capacity and Operational issues NHM system design and human capacity factors: Lack of leadership to conceive and implement an innovation Risk averse attitudes of the manager Power dynamics at the local level Capacity to procure (civil, medicines, HR) Where the purpose of the expenditures is explicit: Better utilization rates; for e.g.- salaries, drugs Budget lines that require discretion in the optimal use of funds utilization is lower, for e.g. - untied grants, MFP. Lack of proper knowledge of spending guidelines

Reasons for under spending: Capacity and Operational issues Other key operational reasons: Delays in approval of plans from GOI Consequent delays in releases of funds Substantial procurement delays HR vacancies CAG audit team in 2013 found more than 600 JSY beneficiary checks lying undelivered from the previous year (2012). Reasons for delays include delays in receipt of funds and several beneficiaries without a bank account.

Limited leadership capacity to conceive and implement innovations: Mission Flexipool BIHAR Budget shares & utilization by NHM Program Components Mean (2011-12 to 2013-14) UTTAR PRADESH Budget shares & utilization by NHM Program Components Mean (2011-12 to 2013-14) 51% 69% 36% 46% 8% 59% 5% 45% 42% 63% 45% 32% 106% 7% 6% 53% RCH Flexi Pool Mission Flexi Pool Immunization & PP Disease Control Budget share Budget Uilization RCH Flexipool Mission Flexipool Immunization & PP Disease Control Budget share Budget Utilization NHM flexi pool utilization is consistently low (includes corpus grants, untied grants etc); UP Utilization of immunization program is high expenditure on explicit budget items vaccines Very low spending on disease control only half the funds spent out of an already very low budget

Limited leadership capacity to conceive and implement innovations: Mission Flexipool

Delays in Civil Works lack of capacity (Capacity & Operational Issue) Only 5 out of 298 construction work could be completed between 2011 & 2015 35 are incomplete and 258 projects were yet to start even though SHSB transferring Rs. 4461.7 million to the Bihar Medical Services and Infrastructure Corporation (BMSIC) between April 2011 & February 2014. Utilization of budget allocated for new construction/renovation: 39% (2011-12), 7% (2012-13 and 2013-14)

Limited medicine procurement capacity (Capacity & Operational Issue) Delays in supply of drugs were widespread - delays based on audit reports : o 418 days in Madhubani district, 337 days in Gaya district o 168 days in East Champaran, 165 days in Kishanganj

Some Policy Implications 1) Consider alternate or innovative means of financing pharmaceutical expenditure (Resource Productivity): Buying generic drugs Eliminate supplier (middle men) and buy directly from manufacturers Pooling of funds 2) Separate treatment of expenditure units for release of funds to improve utilization of funds (Resource Utilization): Treating the expenditure units independently will enable all those units, that are able to spend the funds timely, receive the required funds promptly without having to wait for Utilization Certificates (UCs) to be aggregated at each level (PHC/Block/District level).

Some Policy Implications (Resource Utilization) 3) Delink the capital expenditures from routine expenditures. (Resource Utilization) A separation could free the routine funds flow from the getting blocked by unspent balances under capital works and procurement. 4) Improve existing auditing processes to encourage innovation. (Resource Utilization) The current approach of financial audit needs to shift from checking compliance to guidelines and directives to demonstrating transparency and positive outputs/outcome. The concurrent audits can accommodate this new angle by modifying the TORs of such auditors appointed by the State Health Society.

Policy Implications 5) Reconsider the resource input allocation norms to improve health service delivery outputs Redesigning the existing institutional structure and HR allocation norms, given Bihar s less developed infrastructure, should be considered. Redesign could be based not only on administrative level and population but also on an element that takes into account the time to access health care.

Data Sources RTM Bihar 1. Audited balance sheets of NHM from 2007-08 to 2013-14 2. Website of the NHM, Government of India: https://nrhmmis.nic.in/sitepages/home.aspx 3. PIPs and ROPs of NHM 4. FMRs of NHM at the state level 5. NHM State Project Implementation Plans for the study years 6. Budget Books Government of Bihar 7. Census 2011, Government of India 8. Planning Commission: http://planningcommission.gov.in 9. Reserve Bank of India: https://www.rbi.org.in 10. Website of the Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation, Government of India: http://mospi.nic.in/mospi_new/site/home.aspx 11. Bihar Economic Survey, 2014-15