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Global Public Health
An International Journal for Research, Policy and Practice
Volume 16, 2021 - Issue 8-9: Politics and Pandemics
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Articles

Pandemic momentum for health systems financialisation: Under the cloaks of Universal Health Coverage

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Pages 1334-1345 | Received 15 Oct 2020, Accepted 05 Apr 2021, Published online: 27 Apr 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Although a highly ambiguous and contested idea, Universal Health Coverage (UHC) is the hegemonic concept in international debates on health system reforms. States’ difficulties to provide adequate and comprehensive response to people’s health needs arising from the COVID-19 pandemic strengthened the impetus for UHC implementation. But while featured as the way to achieve justice in health, analyses of UHC-kind reform experiences since the 1990s show that it may be comprehended rather as a new facet of neoliberalism in the health policies’ arena. Its insurance arrangements are aimed to finance packages of health goods and services for the poor, while states play mainly a role of public funds administrators, buying from public and private providers competing in the market. UHC contributes to health system fragmentation and segmentation, weakens public structures and opens new markets for corporations to capture public funds. COVID-19 pandemic subjected health systems to unforeseen stress, underscoring the crucial role that a well-funded public health system plays in people’s lives. Assessing pandemic’s challenges may be an opportunity to build more egalitarian health systems, based on dignity and not people’s money. However, the unreflecting adoption of technocratic health paradigms and solutions may, instead, ultimately pave the way for further health financialisation and injustice.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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