1 / 10

The Global Fund The Private Sector

The Global Fund The Private Sector. &. Workshop. 7 th Regional Meeting for East Asia and the Pacific Vientiane, Laos 15-17 September 2010. The Global Fund & the Private Sector. The Global Fund was established as a public-private partnership.

Jeffrey
Download Presentation

The Global Fund The Private Sector

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Global Fund The Private Sector & Workshop 7th Regional Meeting for East Asia and the Pacific Vientiane, Laos 15-17 September 2010

  2. The Global Fund & the Private Sector • The Global Fund was established as a public-private partnership. • The Global Fund encourages the private sector to engage in all aspects of its work ranging from mobilization of resources, implementation of grants and governance of funds. • The private sector is an important partner to: • Meet the Global Fund’s long term resource requirements; • Support country stakeholders to access funds, improve programmatic performance, increase program reach and provide effective oversight; • Mobilize global and local support in the fight against the three diseases.

  3. The Business Case for Action • Businesses have an enormous stake in the fight against AIDS, TB and malaria - epidemics that affect their workforce and, if left unchecked, can rob them of their workers and their markets. • Lower productivity; • Increased costs; • Declining profits and return on investment. • Farsighted companies have incorporated the fight against the three diseases into their corporate strategy because they are convinced that there is a business case for doing so: • Control of the cost of AIDS, TB and malaria; • Conflict reduction in the workplace; • Strong markets; • General goodwill and better relations with stakeholders.

  4. The Business Case for Action • Businesses can be an effective partner in addressing AIDS, TB and Malaria as they have many comparative advantages that they can mobilize: • Core business operations and value chains – Introduce health-related programs in the workplace, upstream supply chain, downstream customer networks, and among peer industry groups. • Social investment - Support programs that fight AIDS, TB and malaria by contributing resources, expertise, product donations and other in-kind contributions. • Public Advocacy, Policy Dialogue and Institution Strengthening - Engage in advocacy, public policy dialogue and efforts to mobilize political support and resources to fight the three diseases.

  5. The Business Case for Action • Businesses can be an effective partner in addressing AIDS, TB and Malaria as they have many comparative advantages that they can mobilize: • Core business operations and value chains – Introduce health-related programs in the workplace, upstream supply chain, downstream customer networks, and among peer industry groups. • Social investment - Support programs that fight AIDS, TB and malaria by contributing resources, expertise, product donations and other in-kind contributions. • Public Advocacy, Policy Dialogue and Institution Strengthening - Engage in advocacy, public policy dialogue and efforts to mobilize political support and resources to fight the three diseases.

  6. Group Exercise

  7. An Internal Analysis… • Identify potential areas of collaboration • Key questions: • Why do you want to work with the Private Sector and what is your goal? • Which areas need assistance? (e.g BCC, bed net distribution, etc.) • Analyze your organization • Key questions: • Does it have the capacity and the internal systems to collaborate with the Private Sector? • Are there any internal obstacles that could obstruct the public-private partnership? (Constraints because of the nature of your organization?) • What makes your organization an attractive partner? How would you recognize the partnership?

  8. … and an External Analysis • 1. Identify partners • What are the big and influential companies in your country? Do they have a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) program? • Are there companies that have a particular interest in fighting the three diseases because of their business or their type of business (for instance extractive industries)? • Are there any CSR business coalitions in your country or region? Are there any business coalitions on HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria? • 2. Consult other stakeholders • For instance: the Private Sector representative of the CCM, UN agencies, NGOs, the Global Fund, the government.

  9. Group work • Produce an internal and external analysis of your country. Make an action plan based on this analysis (1 hour) • Presentation (10 minutes for each group)

  10. Thank you Ravi & Nicolas 10

More Related