If India were to have achieved the target in 2015-16, the Centre should have accounted for 42 per cent of public-health expenditure–and the Centre should have spent thrice the amount it did while the states should have spent more than double the amount they did–according to our counterfactual analysis of national health spending data.
In 2017-18, the Centre accounted for 37 per cent of India’s public-health expenditure while the states bore the rest, according to data in the National Health Profile 2018, based on budget estimates for that year. This figure rose from 31 per cent in 2015-16, the latest year for which actual expenditure data were available.