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Funding Mechanisms for SRHR. Challenges and Opportunities in the Current Environment. Suzanne Ehlers and Mercedes Mas de Xaxás Population Action International Presentation to EuroNGOs Annual Conference 8 June 2006. Global Political Context. Polarization around SRHR
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Funding Mechanisms for SRHR Challenges and Opportunities in the Current Environment Suzanne Ehlers and Mercedes Mas de Xaxás Population Action International Presentation to EuroNGOs Annual Conference 8 June 2006
Global Political Context • Polarization around SRHR - Most European governments (especially Denmark, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, UK) have increased policy strength and funding - U.S. government under Bush administration remains formidable opponent on both policy (Mexico City Policy, abstinence requirements, anti-prostitution pledge) and funding (proposed 18% cut in international FP/RH funding for FY2007) • SRHR on periphery of development agenda - Missing 9th MDG on SRHR, although some related targets in other goals - Improved access to contraceptive supplies one of Millennium Project’s “Quick Wins”
Current Aid Framework: Diverse Mechanisms • Poverty Reduction Strategies (PRS) - Initiated by the World Bank in 1999 - Outline national analysis of poverty and strategies to combat it; written by country governments and approved by WB/IMF - WB review showed most PRSPs include policies on RH, but very few include concrete action plans and/or budget; 15% mention RH supplies • Sector-Wide Approaches (SWAp) - Donor funding supports single sector policy and expenditure program under government leadership - 20 countries have SWAp in some form - SWAps can improve health service delivery and capacity building, but have not alleviated larger problem of resource shortfalls • General Budget Support - Broad funding mechanism; generally offered when country systems function well - Limited expenditure tracking mean data on funding for RH are poor
Current Aid Framework continued • Country Strategy Papers (CSP) - Summaries of development priorities for countries that receive EC funding - UNFPA review of 70+ CSPs from ACP countries showed attention to maternal and infant health and HIV, but not to family planning • Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria (GFATM) - HIV/AIDS programs have received 56% of Fund’s disbursements (through first 4 rounds) - GFATM distributed 195 million condoms through Dec 2005 - Advocates suggest increased support for RH is possible within GFATM • President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) - Authorized by President Bush in 2003 to fund up to $15 billion over 5 years - Actual spending totaled $6 billion in first two years - 20 percent of funding designated for HIV prevention, of which one-third must go to abstinence-until-marriage programs - Allocated $6.4 million for condoms in 15 focus countries in FY2005
Innovative Financing Efforts • International Airfare Solidarity Contribution (IASC) - Airline ticket tax launched by France in July 06 to support access by developing countries to quality treatment against HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria - 13 countries will impose the tax in addition to existing ODA budgets - Prevention, including SRH and supplies, should be part of global health definition in UK & France joint study on additional funding through the IASC • International Drug Purchasing Facility (IDPF) - Will channel resources of the IASC to lower the cost of drugs for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, and improve their availability in developing countries - Loose structure, supposed to rely on existing international organizations - IDPF resources should be committed to GFATM, at least in part • International Finance Facility (IFF) - Designed to frontload aid to help meet MDGs - Could provide additional $50b annually in ODA by leveraging money through international capital and bond markets - Proposal has received mixed support from donors, developing countries, NGOs and business
Financial Scene • Total funding for SRHR continues to increase, from $3.2 billion in 2002 to $4.7 billion in 2003 (most recent year available). • Almost all increases in SRHR spending are going to HIV/AIDS – which recorded a 40% funding increase from 2002 to 2003. • Meanwhile, funding for basic reproductive health and family planning has stagnated in recent years. • In 2003, donors only provided 46% of the funds they committed at the International Conference on Population and Development. • Data are incomplete and realistic cost estimates must come from the countries themselves.
European Union • European Union development assistance for population and RH totaled €638 million in 2004. • Total EU spending on RH broken down: - 43% on HIV/AIDS - 27% on reproductive health - 13% on family planning - 11% on safe motherhood - 6% on policy and management • European NGOs offer technical expertise, initiate resolutions and petitions, educate other NGOs and “watchdog” EU commitments.
U.S. • The U.S. provided $1.8 billion for population and RH in 2003, nearly double its 2002 spending. Most of this increase is due to PEPFAR. • The U.S. provided $71 million for contraceptive supplies in 2004, 35% of total donor spending and $6 million more than UNFPA. • The U.S. has spent an average of 9% of ODA on RH over the past three years, although its ODA as a share of GNI remains smaller (average 0.13%) than any other donor country. • Earlier this year, President Bush requested a $79 million funding cut for international FP/RH (not including PEPFAR). If enacted, it would have equaled a 49% reduction from the amount the U.S. spent on international FP/RH ten years ago (adjusted for inflation).
Multilaterals • In 2003, the World Bank made loan commitments of $500 million for reproductive health. • UNFPA supplied 32% of total donor funding for contraceptive supplies in 2004. UNFPA remains an important player, but the trend of donors giving UNFPA earmarked funding compromises its ability to have a coherent global program. • Foundations and NGOs are also important donors in SRHR, contributing $300 million and $70 million respectively in 2003.
Cross-cutting Challenges • Demand for increased resources and better coordination must originate from the country level. • ICPD funding estimates are incomplete and outdated. • Donors require accountability in new funding approaches. • It is important to agree how success will be measured in new project support. • The U.S. is the largest donor by far in monetary terms, but its policy restrictions significantly reduce the impact of its funding.
Opportunities • NGOs can activate their partner networks at the country level to advocate directly to their governments and donors. Civil society should be given a greater role in the design of new funding mechanisms. • Increased donor attention to HIV/AIDS, maternal health, and other related issues provides opportunity for integration with existing SRHR programs. • PRSPs, CSPs, SWAps and other new funding mechanisms should include at least one SRHR-related target, such as increased contraceptive prevalence. • SRHR should be incorporated into innovative new financing mechanisms, such as IASC/IDPF revenues targeted at GFATM.