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Resource Needs and Funding for Health Systems. Professor Brook K. Baker Health GAP (Global Access Project) Northeastern U. School of Law, Program on Human Rights and the Global Economy
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Resource Needs and Funding for Health Systems Professor Brook K. Baker Health GAP (Global Access Project) Northeastern U. School of Law, Program on Human Rights and the Global Economy Seminar: Right to Health: Challenges in Funding, Health Systems and Universal Access in Development Policies, Madrid, Spain June 2, 2010
Outline of Presentation • Current global health spending: domestic health spending and development/donor assistance for health. • Global health resource needs and financing gaps. • Campaigning for adequate and sustained donor financing for health – what should we be doing?
Health Spending in Developing Countries with 92% of Global Disease Burden is Anemic • 2004, global health spending $4.1 trillion • 2003, dev. country health spending $410 billion World Bank Strategy for HNP Results 2007. • 2005, health spending in SSA $27 billion. GHWA Education (2008). • Out of pocket – 70% in LICs 50% in African countries)
Domestic Resources for Health:Abuja 15% Commitment; New Revenues • At the end of 2009, only six African countries had ever met their 2001 Abuja Declaration commitment to spend 15% of their budget on health. • Countries must also pursue a job-growth and domestic revenue agenda • Resource extraction fees • Tax avoidance and capital flight • Pro-growth, job-creation policies
Would Meeting Abuja 15% Make a Difference?USAID Roundtable (2008)
Donor/Development Assistance for Health • DAH estimates vary depending on what is included. • Actual disbursements are generally significantly less than commitments. • A large portion of DAH never hits the ground.
Development Assistance for Health1990-2007 Lancet 2009; 373: 2113–24
Increasing Donor Assistance for Health is Essential • “Massive increases in external assistance are needed” to finance MDG health goals. (WB, Health Financing Revisited 2006) • Old estimates of resource needs (CMH & World Bank) range between $25 billion and $70 billion in additional aid, per year, to meet MDG health goals. Ibid. • 2009 estimates from the Task Force on Innovative Financing has calculated additional global health resource needs for LICs alone of $45 billion by 2015. • These estimates may be far low, esp. when all dev. countries are included.
TOTAL DEVELOPING COUNTRY HEALTH RESOURCE NEEDS AND GAP 2009-2015 (Baker, 2010)
Recurrent Dilemmas in DAH • Earmarks & conditionalities. • Only 20% to government budget support. • Over 50% is off budget and not available to support the health system or to pay recurrent public sector costs: staff, infrastructure, training, management, etc. • Very high overhead costs, small percentage hits the ground • Unpredictable, short-term and volatile.
Recurrent Dilemmas in DAH • Lack of coordination/harmonization. • Tied aid and donor-provided technical assistance. • Overhead losses. • Corruption and inefficiency in recipient bureaucracies.
Subadditionality • Donor health aid is often fungible, meaning that countries can disinvest in health at the same time that donors are investing, usually as a result of IMF/ministry of finance macroeconomic restraint policies and misguided government spending priorities.
Hydraulic Pressure → Subadditionality • On average, 37% of all additional aid was indirectly diverted to increase foreign currency reserves; another 37% was diverted to reduce domestic debt; only 27% was actually spent. Figure A2.9.
Poorer, Weaker Countries Spent Even Less • Good performers (low inflation, high reserves) spent 49%, weak performers only 17%.
Poorer, Weaker Countries Spent Even Less • Good performers (low inflation, high reserves) spent 49%, weak performers only 17%.
Sub-Sub-Additionality • New study shows that for every $1 of foreign aid, governments may have reduced their own spending, on average, by $1.14! • Lu et al., Lancet (2010). • An unpublished study finds a high correlation between subadditionality and IMF loans.
Health Spending Faces Competition: Food and Fuel Shocks 2007-2008 • Food prices went up 83% from 2005-2008 and have remained high • Oil increased over 300% 2003-08 but has fallen back since • Global food resource needs estimated between $20-30 billion a year. • These price shocks had adverse effects on imported inflation, government spending, and currency reserves
Global Recession and Climate Control • Current financial crisis: lower remittances, fewer exports, eroded terms of trade, lower tax revenue; increased debt, lowered reserves • Climate control and mitigation resource needs - $100 billion/year. • Global Fund needs $20 billion 2011-2013 • PEPFAR flat-funded FY 2009-2011 What are the prospects for increased resources for health?
Campaigning for Global Health Funding • Mobilizing and allocating domestic resources for health – long overdue • Donor achievement of .7% ODA, including .1% for health – long overdue • Innovative financing for health, esp. CTL/FTT for health – an idea whose time has come. • Attacking IMF macroeconomic constraints and achieving additionality – long overdue