Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 17 – Vladimir Putin’s
suggestion that Russians should pay for a portion of their health care not only
violates the Russian Constitution which mandates government-financed care for
all but will also increase social inequality and worsen public health,
according to Russian experts.
It is not clear exactly what form
such co-payments would be – his own press secretary says no program has yet
been coordinated with the Presidential Administration – but the fact that the
Kremlin made it just five months before the election and at a time when he is
spending vast sums on the military and “mega” projects like bridges to Crimea
and Sakhalin is striking.
Putin’s words underscore his
contempt for ordinary Russians and his willingness to see the health of many
Russians deteriorate still further given that many can barely make ends meet at
this time of economic crisis and will certainly be forced to choose between
food and housing, on the one hand, and medicine, on the other.
The Russian leader may believe that
such proposals will largely avoid criticism because they reflect trends in
other countries, including in the United States, where a much-less-hard-pressed
government is still trying to shift medical cost burdens from the taxpayers as
a whole to those who need treatment.
But experts in Moscow are already
criticizing the whole idea because of its economic and health consequences, and
no one expects it to be implemented any time soon. Indeed, like an increasing
number of Putin initiatives, it may never happen. However, it is an indication
of what he thinks and of how hard pressed Russia’s budget is given the crisis
and his military spending.
For a selection of social and
economic criticism that has surfaced so far, see vedomosti.ru/economics/articles/2017/10/17/738102-rashodi-na-zdorove.
More is certain to appear in the coming days as Russians focus on this latest
attack on their rights and as experts consider the impact more income
inequality and ill health will have on population growth rates.
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