As the nation is heading towards its 13th national election, the long queue of people’s demands is lining up behind all the competitive political parties. Health sector experts are also sharing their demands across various platforms, and one common question that has repeatedly been raised and debated is what strategy the newly elected government will adopt to achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC) by 2032. The question for the next government is not just whether they support UHC by 2032, but whether they have the political will to fund it. Currently, Bangladesh operates one of the most privatized health systems in the world-not by design, but by default. With public health spending remaining stagnant at a mere 0.74% to 0.8% of GDP and households covering nearly 73% of the costs, we have created a system where getting sick and hospitalized often means getting poor.
UHC is often mistaken for a charitable ideal. In reality, it is hard economics. A nation cannot sustain its middle-income ascent when-according to the Health Economics Unit, over 6 million of its citizens are pushed into poverty annually by medical bills. This is a massive drain on our already constrained economic resources. The consequences of this financing gap are most visible in the medicine market. In a recent roundtable at The Business Standard, experts noted that while the government spends roughly Tk 2,200 crore on medicines, households spend nearly Tk 38,000 crore out of pocket. This 67-70% out-of-pocket reliance is an anomaly even in South Asia. By comparison, our neighbors like Sri Lanka and even India have managed to secure higher public financing shares in healthcare and now shield their populations from the worst of these shocks.
“Bangladesh’s push for Universal Health Coverage cannot succeed on financing alone. Without institutional reform, skilled health workers, and strong urban primary care, higher budgets will fail to protect citizens from medical impoverishment”
While our financing model in healthcare requires modernisation, our disease burden has fast-forwarded to the future. The recently released Health and Morbidity Status Survey (HMSS) 2025 paints a worrying picture of a workforce in decline. Hypertension now affects 78 per 1,000 respondents, followed closely by peptic ulcers (64) and diabetes (43).




