On matter principles and based on our 90s experience we should never budget for any donation in critical area like health; We have the ability in 2 trillion or 20b usd budget to finance the health sector including hiv aids, tb and name it. We just have to see remove wastage going to NYC and put in health.
Any extra donation from USAID should go towards non-critical areas. Right now we are giving every orphan, elderly,disabled, street kid some 2,000 to 5,000 shs a month..good start in starting national welfare system...why can't we do the same for health.
There is need to find Ngilu proposal and find a workable formulae.
There is a lot that is happening now...after gov started insuring police,aps,teachers and civil servants....now I see hospitals cropping up everywhere..private hospitals that are surviving from capitation from gov.
If NHIF was to be reformed..and for each citizen who is insured....a capitation fee is paid to hospitals..be it private or public..health services in this country will improve.
As much as we need help; we should never become helpless or at mercy of USAID or WB.
Gov is working on free education by 2017 upto high school level....if we had followed WB....we would be in a mess. The same need to happen in health.
Kenya can afford universal health care systems that is really working. If Cuba can afford it..we can afford it.
After which we should expland the national social welfare to include those that are genuinely jobless and desperate.
I don't see that as a helpful way of looking at it:
First, the government can afford to spend little on health precisely because "donors" are doing plenty of heavy lifting all over the place. In order to be really free of "donors", it would be necessary to then make up for that "donor money".
Second, the taxes are not even enough to make up for the shortfall as things currently stand: It had never occurred to anyone in Kenya to track private spending on health until USAID proposed it. There is now a USAID supported project that does that, and the results are shocking: "out-of-pocket" expenses on health are a huge burden and especially on the poor.