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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Funnel sin tax, lotto, casino money into UHC ­– Recto

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Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto said government revenues  from the multi-billion-peso casino and lotto income, plus sin tax collections will be funnelled to Universal Health Care so that it woud not go unfunded.

“The tax on vices will fund the good virtue of health-for-all,” Recto said. “The UHC bill is like a doctor’s prescription. It would be useless if there is no money to buy the medicines. And the bill earmarks a raft of funding sources. One enemy of health care is anemic funding.”

He said incremental sin tax collections —from tobacco and alcohol products—are now pledged to the UHC.

Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto

=Total sin tax collections reached P145.3 billion in 2016, and P187 billion in 2017. Of these, P64.2 billion in 2016, and P66.8 billion in 2017 were deemed incremental collections.

In addition, 50 percent of the national share from PAGCOR income will likewise go to UHC, and so will the 40 percent of the “charity fund” of PCSO.

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Recto described the assignment of casino income for cure as a “winning combination.” In his vote speech, he said it was “better for our health institutions to direct where funds must go than for state gaming bodies to triage who will receive help or not.”

“If you make your bet in lotto. a big chunk of the amount of the ticket will go to the treatment of the sick,” Recto said.

He assured that these earmarks are on top of regular annual appropriations for the Department of Health, PhilHealth, and the many mandates and programs under the UHC.

“This cannot be reduced.. We are benchmarking the minimum funding requirements,” Recto said.

Recto said the UHC bill is “a fairly comprehensive catalogue for the cures of what ails our public health system.”

“It addresses all aspects: from financing, to medical manpower, to affordable drugs, to the use of Information Technology, to the improvement of health facilities, to primary health care, to higher PhilHealth benefits, and more,” he said.

“It should be comprehensive. We may give every Filipino a PhilHealth card, but it is useless if there is no facility he can present that card to for treatment,” Recto said in his vote speech.

“We may erect hospitals in gleaming glass and steel, but if there are no doctors and other health professionals who will staff and run them, then what we have built are white elephants,” he said.

“We may have modern curative facilities, but when the sick are continuously dumped on them because we have neglected the promotive and the preventive aspect of medicine, then we have failed to address the roots,” he said.

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