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Article
07 May 2026

Fixing Structural Deficits in India’s Health System

Context

  • India has significantly expanded its medical education system by establishing 43 new medical colleges and increasing MBBS and postgraduate seats.
  • These initiatives aim to strengthen the country’s public healthcare system and address the shortage of doctors, however, the crisis in healthcare is not merely due to a lack of medical graduates.
  • The deeper problem lies in the unequal distribution of doctors, poor infrastructure in rural areas, and weak policy implementation.

Expansion of Medical Education and Its Limitations

  • Dominance of the Private Sector
    • A major concern is that most newly established colleges belong to the private sector.
    • These institutions often charge high capitation fees and have no obligation to provide doctors for government service.
    • As a result, many graduates prefer urban private practice rather than serving in aspirational districts, tribal regions, or remote healthcare centres.
  • Lack of Public Accountability
    • Although thousands of postgraduate seats have been added, there is no clear mechanism to ensure that specialists fill vacancies in public hospitals.
    • Expanding infrastructure without linking it to healthcare delivery creates a gap between policy announcements and actual improvement in services.

Crisis in Community Health Centres (CHCs)

  • Severe Specialist Shortage
    • The condition of CHCs reflects the seriousness of India’s healthcare crisis.
    • CHCs are expected to function as referral units with five specialists: physician, surgeon, obstetrician, paediatrician, and anaesthetist.
    • However, the vacancy rate in rural CHCs is nearly 80%, with only 4,413 specialists available against a requirement of 21,964.
  • Impact on Rural Populations
    • Due to the shortage of specialists, patients from villages and tribal areas are forced to travel long distances to district hospitals or medical colleges for treatment.
    • This increases financial burden, delays medical care, and weakens trust in government healthcare institutions.

Poor Working Conditions in Rural Areas

  • Inadequate Infrastructure
    • Doctors are often unwilling to work in remote regions because healthcare centres lack proper equipment, operation theatres, labour rooms, intensive care units, and emergency facilities.
    • Many hospitals also suffer from shortages of medicines, diagnostics, and trained staff.
  • Social and Professional Challenges
    • The absence of staff quarters, quality schools for children, and professional peer support discourages specialists from accepting rural postings.
    • Without adequate living and working conditions, simply producing more doctors cannot solve the healthcare crisis.

Flawed Budgetary Priorities

  • Excessive Focus on Capital Expenditure
    • Healthcare spending is heavily focused on capital expenditure and construction of buildings rather than operational efficiency.
    • Large investments are made in infrastructure, but insufficient funds are allocated for drugs, diagnostics, ambulance services, emergency care, and staff salaries.
  • Underutilised Healthcare Facilities
    • As a result, many healthcare centres exist physically but remain poorly functional.
    • Infrastructure without adequate manpower and operational support fails to deliver quality healthcare services.

Necessary Reforms and Solutions

  • Linking Postgraduate Seats with Public Service
    • Government-sponsored postgraduate training should be directly linked to vacancies in CHCs and district hospitals.
    • Doctors receiving subsidised education must commit to serving in designated government facilities after completing their training.
  • Incentives for Rural Service
    • Special incentives such as higher salaries, housing facilities, educational support for children, and career benefits can encourage specialists to work in underserved regions.
    • Areas may also be classified as normal, difficult, and most difficult to provide targeted benefits.
  • The All or None Principle
    • The all or none principle should be adopted to ensure that all five specialists are posted together in selected CHCs instead of being scattered across multiple centres.
    • Team-based deployment would improve coordination, reduce workload stress, and strengthen healthcare delivery.

Conclusion

  • India’s healthcare crisis cannot be resolved merely by increasing the number of medical colleges and seats.
  • Sustainable improvement requires better healthcare planning, equitable distribution of specialists, improved rural infrastructure, and strong incentives for public service.
  • A healthcare system focused on accessibility, efficiency, and accountability is essential to ensure quality medical care for India’s poor and marginalized communities.
Editorial Analysis

Article
07 May 2026

Understanding Inequality in India’s Growth Story

Context

  • Recent there have been significant economic and labour reforms in India, including the Labour Codes and the replacement of MGNREGA with the Viksit Bharat-Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Bill, 2025.
  • This has intensified concerns regarding the welfare of informal workers and rural populations.
  • Simultaneously, official narratives increasingly claim that inequality is no longer a major issue in India.
  • However, patterns of consumption expenditure, class divisions, and rural-urban disparities reveal that inequality remains deeply rooted in the Indian economy.

Understanding Inequality in India

  • It involves differences in income, wealth, and consumption expenditure, along with disparities based on class, caste, gender, and region.
  • Using data from the Household Consumer Expenditure Survey (HCES 2023–24) conducted by the NSSO, the estimated Gini Index for India stands at 0.29, higher than the widely cited World Bank estimate of 0.25.
  • This difference highlights methodological issues in measuring inequality and suggests that existing estimates may underestimate the actual extent of economic disparity.
  • Since the richest sections are often underrepresented in surveys, inequality appears lower than it truly is.

Urban-Rural Divide and Consumption Inequality

  • Urban India as More Affluent but More Unequal
    • India’s economic growth and consumption boom have been driven largely by non-food expenditure, including spending on healthcare, education, housing, and consumer goods.
    • These opportunities are concentrated in urban areas, making urban India more affluent but also more unequal.
    • Urban non-food Monthly Per Capita Expenditure (MPCE) is around 1.5 times higher than the national average, while rural expenditure remains below it.
    • Inequality in non-food expenditure is significantly higher than in food expenditure, reflecting unequal access to better living standards and opportunities.
    • Persistent agricultural distress and limited rural development have widened the gap between rural and urban India.
  • Growing Gap Between Rich and Poor
    • Economic benefits are heavily concentrated among higher-income groups. In urban India, the top 10% account for 27% of total non-food expenditure.
    • The richest urban decile spends six times more than the poorest urban decile, while the richest urban group spends nine times more than the poorest rural group.
    • Such figures demonstrate increasing concentration of wealth and consumption among affluent urban populations, while lower-income groups struggle with rising living costs and limited opportunities.

Structural Nature of Inequality

  • Inequality in India is increasingly structural rather than individual. Between-decile inequality contributes far more to overall inequality than differences within the same group.
  • Nearly 90% of urban non-food expenditure inequality arises from disparities between income groups.
  • This indicates a widening economic distance between the rich and the poor, especially in access to education, healthcare, technology, and social mobility.
  • The unequal distribution of opportunities reinforces long-term social and economic divisions.

Limitations of Official Data

  • Official surveys fail to fully capture the super-rich, leading to underestimation of actual inequality levels.
  • At the same time, weaknesses in welfare targeting are visible in cases where affluent households benefit from schemes such as the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana (PMGKY) or possess BPL ration cards.
  • Such inconsistencies reveal flaws in the identification of beneficiaries and weaken the effectiveness of welfare policies aimed at supporting vulnerable groups.

Debt-Led Consumption and Economic Insecurity

  • A large section of India’s population depends on debt-led consumption to maintain living standards.
  • Increased spending does not necessarily reflect genuine prosperity because many households rely on borrowing rather than stable income growth.
  • This creates economic vulnerability and financial insecurity, especially during inflation, unemployment, or economic slowdown.
  • Rising consumption, therefore, should not be mistaken for declining inequality.

Critical Evaluation of Policy Assumptions

  • Policies based on the assumption of lower inequality may weaken labour protections and reduce welfare support for vulnerable populations.
  • Reforms affecting employment guarantees and labour rights could disproportionately harm rural workers and the informal sector.
  • Addressing inequality requires more accurate measurement, stronger welfare systems, inclusive development policies, and structural reforms that reduce disparities in access to income, opportunities, and resources.

Conclusion

  • Inequality in India remains widespread, multidimensional, and structurally embedded and while urban India has become more prosperous, it has also become more unequal.
  • Economic growth has primarily benefited affluent urban groups, while rural labourers, informal workers, and marginalised communities continue to face insecurity and exclusion.
  • Persistent class divisions, unequal consumption patterns, flawed welfare targeting, and debt-driven survival strategies reveal the limitations of current development policies.
  • Sustainable and inclusive growth requires policies that prioritize social justice, equitable distribution of resources, and long-term welfare protections rather than relying solely on aggregate economic growth indicators.
Editorial Analysis

Online Test
07 May 2026

Paid Test

CAMP-HINDI-GS-RV-04-History

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 120 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.

This Test is part of a Test Series
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Online Test
07 May 2026

Paid Test

CAMP-HINDI-GS-RV-04-History

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 0 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.

This Test is part of a Test Series
Test Series : Offline- Prelims Camp Hindi Batch 1
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Online Test
07 May 2026

Paid Test

CA Test - 06 (CA1126)

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 0 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight

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Test Series : Prelims Plus Test Series 2026 - Online Batch 3
Price : ₹ 7000.0 ₹ 6000.0
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07 May 2026

Paid Test

CA Test - 06 (CA1126)

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 0 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight

This Test is part of a Test Series
Test Series : Prelims Plus Test Series 2026 - Offline Batch 3
Price : ₹ 8000.0 ₹ 7000.0
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Online Test
07 May 2026

Paid Test

CA Test - 06 (CA1126)

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 0 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight

This Test is part of a Test Series
Test Series : Prelims Plus Test Series 2026 - Offline Batch 2
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07 May 2026

Paid Test

CA Test - 06 (CA1126)

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 0 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight

This Test is part of a Test Series
Test Series : Prelims Plus Test Series 2026 - Online Batch 2
Price : ₹ 7000.0 ₹ 6000.0
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07 May 2026

Paid Test

Full Length Test - 8 (R7728)

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 0 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight

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Test Series : PowerUP Combo 2026 - Offline Batch 7
Price : ₹ 15000.0 ₹ 13000.0
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07 May 2026

Paid Test

Full Length Test - 8 (R7728)

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 0 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight

This Test is part of a Test Series
Test Series : PowerUP Combo 2026 - Online Batch 7
Price : ₹ 13000.0 ₹ 11000.0
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