Abstract

Indonesia faces a growing informal sector in the wake of implementing a national social health insurance system-Jaminan Kesehatan Nasional (JKN)-that supersedes the vertical programmes historically tied to informal employment. Sustainably financing coverage for informal workers requires incentivising enrolment for those never insured and recovering enrolment among those who once paid but no longer do so. This study aims to assess the ability- and willingness-to-pay of informal sector workers who have stopped paying the JKN premium for at least six months, across districts of different fiscal capacity, and explore which factors shaped their willingness and ability to pay using qualitative interviews. Surveys were conducted for 1,709 respondents in 2016, and found that informal workers' average ability and willingness to pay fell below the national health insurance scheme's premium amount, even as many currently spend more than this on healthcare costs. There were large groups for whom the costs of the premium were prohibitive (38%) or, alternatively, they were both technically willing and able to pay (25%). As all individuals in the sample had once paid for insurance, their main reasons for lapsing were based on the uncertain income of informal workers and their changing needs. The study recommends a combination of strategies of targeting of subsidies, progressive premium setting, facilitating payment collection, incentivising insurance package upgrades and socialising the benefits of health insurance in informal worker communities.

Highlights

  • A challenge for Asian countries recently implementing social health insurance is covering and incentivising enrolment for the informal sector; the so-called ‘missing middle’ [1]

  • We found that informal workers’ healthcare expenditure on average exceeds the premium amount (IDR 25,500), even as their ATP falls below this level

  • Expenditures increased with rising district fiscal capacity, which signified greater ATP, but the same trend was not observed between willingness and district wealth

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Summary

Introduction

A challenge for Asian countries recently implementing social health insurance is covering and incentivising enrolment for the informal sector; the so-called ‘missing middle’ [1]. To achieve universal health coverage, countries must design health insurance programmes, historically. Ability and willingness to pay for national health insurance of Indonesia’s informal sector

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