Marcos orders PhilHealth amnesty for non-payers

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. announced that he has ordered PhilHealth to grant a general amnesty to companies and individuals who failed to pay contributions, providing one year to catch up on arrears. This one-time interest waiver for 2026 will benefit around 300,000 beneficiaries.

In a video statement on Thursday, January 8, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. expressed awareness of the impact of the 3% PhilHealth contribution on citizens. "I have directed PhilHealth to grant a general amnesty to the business heads, private employers, and self-employed citizens who have not paid their contributions to PhilHealth," he said.

This amnesty allows employers one year to settle missed contributions from 2013 to 2024, with a one-time interest waiver for 2026. Marcos stated it will aid approximately 300,000 beneficiaries. He also urged employers to update information and register employees under the Yaman ng Kalusugan or YAKAP program, which offers basic lab services and coverage for 75 essential medicines up to P20,000 annually.

Meanwhile, PhilHealth president and CEO Edwin Mercado noted that while benefit payments surged 76% to P289.26 billion in 2025 compared to the previous year, the state insurer still requires broader coverage and access.

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Nigerian officials and doctors shaking hands in a meeting room, symbolizing the government's pledge to release health workers' arrears amid a strike.
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Nigeria's government pledges quick release of health workers' arrears

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The Federal Government of Nigeria has committed to releasing N11.995 billion within 72 hours to settle outstanding arrears for doctors and other health workers amid a nationwide strike. This follows a high-level meeting with the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), which began an indefinite strike on Saturday over unpaid salaries and welfare issues. The pledge includes payments for accoutrement allowances and builds on recent disbursements totaling over N40 billion.

The Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) has announced a waiver of interest on missed premium payments by employers from July 2013 to December 2024, following an order from President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. The waiver features a graduated rate based on the payment timeline, with settlements starting from January 24 to December 31, 2026.

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Executive Secretary Ralph Recto and former PhilHealth CEO Emmanuel Ledesma Jr. face complaints of technical malversation, graft, plunder, and grave misconduct filed with the Ombudsman over the transfer of P60 billion in 'excess' PhilHealth funds to the national treasury in 2024.

Building on plans to extend zero-balance billing to select LGU hospitals, the Department of Health advocates redirecting additional MAIFIP funds directly to local units to bypass politicians' guarantee letters and speed up implementation amid 2026 budget debates.

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Following DBM guidelines on qualifications, President Marcos has approved the immediate release of the P5,000 Productivity Enhancement Incentive (PEI) for FY2025 to recognize government workers' service, Malacañang announced Friday. The incentive covers civilian personnel in national agencies, universities, corporations, local units, and military staff. Separately, the Department of Education (DepEd) has begun distributing year-end incentives to over one million employees.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. signed the P6.793-trillion national budget for 2026 on January 5, allocating a record P1.015 trillion to the Department of Education and P530.9 billion to the DPWH. He vetoed P92.5 billion in unprogrammed appropriations, leaving P150.9 billion, while vowing prudent spending to curb corruption. The budget bars political involvement in aid distribution, though critics question the remaining funds.

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Building on DOH's recent push to route MAIFIP funds directly to LGUs and bicameral budget safeguards, the Senate has urged the Department of Health to fully eliminate guarantee letters in the Medical Assistance to Indigent and Financially Incapacitated Patients program for the 2026 budget. Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian emphasized that DOH can act via guidelines without legislation, aiming to depoliticize aid. Anti-corruption watchdogs say the letters foster patronage politics.

 

 

 

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