Business Unity South Africa (Busa) and Business for South Africa (B4SA) will petition President Cyril Ramaphosa to send the NHI Bill back to parliament because it is unconstitutional after it was passed by the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) late yesterday, with eight of the nine provinces voting in favour of the bill without any amendments.
The organisations believe that the NHI Bill in its current format is not only unworkable, unimplementable and unaffordable, but also unconstitutional, on substantive as well as procedural grounds.
Section 79 of the South African Constitution provides that once a Bill is adopted, the president must assent to and sign the Bill or, if he has reservations about its constitutionality, refer it back to the National Assembly for reconsideration.
“Busa and B4SA highlighted the deficiencies in the NHI Bill throughout the entire legislative process, including the unconstitutional provisions that required clarification and amendment. The parliamentary portfolio committee on health and the NCOP ignored our concerns, recommendations, research, data and inputs, as well as those made by a wide range of experts and affected stakeholders,” says Martin Kingston, B4SA steering committee chair.
He says the portfolio committee and the NCOP are legally mandated to ensure that the NHI Bill passes constitutional muster and is properly configured to give healthcare the best possible chance of success. However, there were no amendments at all, including those suggested by the Department of Health itself, which is deeply concerning for the country and democracy.
“The consequence of passing this Bill, unamended, is devastating. It will materially delay access to universal health coverage, lead to disinvestment in the healthcare sector, further damage our already fragile economy and create significant risks for the country in terms of the quality, management and governance of healthcare.”
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Kingston says Busa and B4SA will specifically raise flaws in areas of the legislative process and substance of the Bill that it believes are unconstitutional. Procedural constitutional points that will be raised include:
The business organisations also highlighted the fact that the process conducted by the NCOP Select Committee on Health and Social Services was rushed, inadequate in terms of its mandate and that it failed to properly deal with reports submitted by provinces.
It is also important to note, the organisations say, that the NCOP committee failed to incorporate amendments, provincial public submissions and technical flaws noted by several provinces and even the department of health itself.
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The substantive constitutional flaws in the NHI Bill according to Busa and B4SA include:
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“We need to be clear. we do not reject the Bill in its entirety and have consistently supported its policy direction towards universal health coverage. Our inputs were intended to remedy the constitutional, funding and practical deficiencies in the Bill,” says Cas Coovadia, CEO of Busa.
“We believe the portfolio committee on health and the NCOP acted unconstitutionally in pushing through the Bill without due consideration of these concerns. It also used a simplistic yes or no opinion poll on the desirability of universal health coverage, which was never in question, as the determinant of support for the NHI Bill.”
Coovadia says therefore it is the organisations belief that the president must refer it back to the National Assembly for amendment.
“The private sector’s participation in the NHI is critical to its success, not only in terms of funding, but also in the expansion and delivery of quality healthcare services. As a country, we have consistently seen that when the public and private sectors work together, pooling our substantial resources, expertise, skills and technical know-how, we are able to achieve far more than when we work in isolation of each other.”
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