REVISED AND FINAL CORPORATE KPI FRAMEWORK IS APPROVED
Author:
Kate Macintyre
Article Type:Article Number: 6
ABSTRACT A near-final version of the 16 Corporate KPIs was approved at the 32nd Board meeting in Montreux, Switzerland. The indicators now have baselines (if relevant) and targets, with the exception of the indicator measuring human rights protection which is promised for the next Board meeting.
A final revised version of the corporate key performance indicators (KPIs) was discussed at the 32ndĀ Board meeting.Ā Although the framework of 16 indicators had been approved by the Board in November 2013 (GF/B30/DP07), this edition showed minor revisions had been made to several of them, and most importantly, final methods of measurement, baselines and proposed were presented to the Board for approval.
In the table below we summarize the KPIs, their indicators and the targets proposed.
Table: List of corporate KPIs, with specific measures, baselines and targets
KPI | Specific Measures | Baselines and Targets | ||
1 | Performance against strategic goals | a) Estimated number of lives saved
b) Estimated number of infections prevented |
a) 1.6m lives saved (2011)
b) 30m infections averted in 2011 |
a) 10m lives saved between 2012 – 16
b) 140m new infections prevented 2012-16) |
2 | Quality and coverage of services | a) ARV retention rate at 12 months
b) TB treatment success rate c) Proportion of population at risk potentially covered by LLINs distributed Proportion of population that slept under an ITN the previous night d) Percentage of eligible adults and children currently receiving ART e) Percentage of HIV-positive pregnant women who received antiretrovirals to reduce the risk of mother-to-child transmission f) Percentage of HIV-positive TB patients given ART during TB treatment g)Ā Number of countries with validated population size estimates for female sex workers, men who have sex with men and, where applicable, injecting drug users |
a)Ā 76%
b) 86% c) 47%
42%
d) 36%
e) 66%
f) 67%
n/a |
a)Ā 80%*
b)Ā 90% c)Ā 60%
55%
d) 50%
e) 90%
f) 90%
g)Ā 2014: 35 countries 2015: 45 countries 2016: 55 countries *a) through f) are targets for 2016 |
3 | Performance against strategic service delivery targets | a)Ā Number of people alive on ARV therapy (annual target)
b)Ā Number of TB cases treated according to the DOTS approach c)Ā Number of LLINs distributed d)Ā HIV-positive pregnant women who received antiretrovirals to reduce the risk of mother-to-child transmission e)Ā Number of indoor residual spraying services delivered f)Ā Cases with bacteriologically confirmed drug resistant TB treated with a second line regimen g)Ā People who received HIV testing and counseling and know their results |
a)Ā 3.5m
b)Ā 2.5m c)Ā 62m d)Ā 383,000
e)Ā 7.7m f)Ā 12,000
g)Ā 34m |
a) 7.3 m**
b) 21m c) 390m d) 2.7m
e) 26m f) 260,000
g) 359m ** targets are 2012 -2016.a) is annual; the rest are cumulative. |
4 | Efficiency of Global Fund investment decisions | Alignment between investment decisions and country need; with need defined in terms of disease burden and ability to pay | 2013 alignment score: 0.65 | 2014: 0.62
2015:0.57 20% improvement in alignment over 2014 – 16 |
5 | Health system strengthening | HIV, TB and malaria service availability and readiness rating: proportion of countries in which services SARA score improves by 5 percentage points or more over 2014 – 2016 | 2013: 3of 4 countries surveyed showed improvement of at least 5 percentage points in HIV,TB or Malaria Score. [Range was 1 – 13 percentage points over 12 to 37 months.] | 2014-2016: 60% of countries show an improvement of at least 5 percentage points in SARA score |
6 | Alignment of supported programs with national systems | Percentage of investments in countries where Global Fund support is reported on national disease strategy budgets | 2014: 87% of High Impact countries reported Fund grants on a national budget; disease strategy or health sector budget in mid-2014 when weighted by allocation | 2015: 90% |
7 | Access to funding | a)Ā Time from final concept note submission to Grant Approval Committee recommendation
b)Ā Time from Grant Approval Committee recommendation to grant signing c)Ā Time from grant signing to first disbursement |
n/a | From submission of final CN to first disbursement
a)Ā forCN submitted 2014: 75% grants take 10 months or less b)Ā forCN submitted 2015: 75% grants take 8 months or less |
8 | NFM implementationĀ (temporary KPI) | Amount of grant expenses for the transition to the NFM committed to annual schedule of country demands | 2013: $0.6bn in grant expenses committed in 2013 against a forecast of $0.4bn | 2014: UP to USD 1.9bn over 2013-14 period
2015: KPI to be phased out |
9 | Effective operational risk management | Portfolio Risk Index: QUART operational risk rating for eligible grants weighted by grant budget | 2013: 1.9 (High Impact Countries) | 2014: 1.9 (High Impact Countries)
2015: Portfolio risk index within 10% of 2013 baseline (range1.7 to 2.1) |
10 | Value for money | Spend reduction in commodity purchases within pooled procurement mechanism for equivalent commodities at equivalent quality and volume | 2013: 13% reduction in spend | Reduce spend by 8% per year 2013-2015 for equivalent commodities at equivalent quality and volume |
11 | Grant expenses forecast | Percentage of forecast grant expenses made to schedule | 2013 Corporate Expenditure Rate (CER) -grant expenses 1.44 | At each reporting period (2014 – 16):
Ā·Actual grant expenses within10% of forecast Ā·Ā CER-grant expenses within range 0.9 to 1.1 |
12 | Human rights protection | Percentage of human rights complaints against Global Fund supported programs successfully identified through risk assessment tools; and resolved through Secretariat policies and procedures. | To be submitted for approval March 2015 | To be submitted for approval March 2015 |
13 | Resource mobilisation | a)Ā Actual pledges as percent of replenishment target
b)Ā Pledge conversion rate. Actual contributions as a percentage of forecast contributions |
a)Ā n/a
b)Ā 2013: 97% |
c)Ā USD15bn in pledges
d)Ā 2014-16: 100% forecast contributions received at each reporting period |
14 | Domestic financing for AIDS, TB and malaria | Percent of programs accessing funding where government contributions meet minimum counterpart financing thresholds. | 2013: 96% of renewals and early applicants met minimum counterpart financing thresholds | 2014: 90% of programs meet threshold
2015: 90% of programs meet threshold |
15 | Efficiency of grant management operations | Opex rate operating expenses as a percentage of grants under management | 2013: 2.3% | 2014: below a 3% max
2015: below a 2.75% max |
16 | Quality of management and leadership | Management and Leadership Index | 2013: 76% of items on the management quality survey received favourable responses | 2014: 78% of items on manager quality survey receive favourable responses
2015:Ā To be submitted to Board March 2015 |
These KPIs, which have seen considerable work in the last year,Ā are intended to be one of the main vehicles for measuring progress towards, and achievement of, the strategic objectives under the 2012 ā 2016 strategic plan.Ā Experts joined the Boardās committees and constituencies, its technical and funding partners to produce āvisible and measurableā indicators that are mapped to the Strategy.
All the indicators have now been defined and the majority have baselines (where relevant) and targets.Ā Two indicators ā human rights protection and quality of management and leadership – remain unfinished in terms of targets for 2016.Ā These two will be completed for submission to the March Board meeting in 2015.
All the other 14 indicators now have purposes, methodologies and limitations briefly (sometimes very briefly) described in the framework.
Aidspan comment:Ā the development of the KPIs has been long and complex, and it is good that there are now 16 relatively clear indicators to measure the Fundās own progress towards their strategic objectives for 2016.
That said, more information must be made available to accompany this framework to explain how several of the KPIās will actually be measured.
For example, KPI 4: āEfficiency of Global Fund investment decisionsā is an āalignment scoreā with a range from 0 to 1. A lower score means higher alignment, but it is not clear how this will be measured. The Fund has said it will use the same or similar qualitative factors that it used to adjust its allocations to countries.Ā The exact way that these factors are used has not been made public under the allocations model, so cannot be made public under the KPIs — which makes it difficult for those outside the Secretariat to understand the indicator.
Since the allocations under the NFM are the main decisions taken to meet country needs (as defined by disease burden and ability to pay) it again begs the question as to how the Fund arrives at this measure of Ā ‘efficiency’.
Perhaps we are not alone in our confusion, as the framework reports in the limitations section of this indicator that work is now underway to test a “complementary measure of investment decision efficiency”.
One of few composition changes is described in a footnote to indicator #2: quality and coverage of services.Ā Initially these concepts were to be measured as separate indicators, but as two of the three measures were to be the same for both coverage and quality, the decision was taken to merge the indicators into one.Ā Ā This indicator now has seven sub measures.
As reported earlier, the indicators will be reported semi- annually or annually from next year.
Information for this article was taken from Board Document GF-B32-24a, Corporate Key Performance Indicators Narrative. This document is postedĀ on the Global Fund website atĀ www.theglobalfund.org/en/board/meetings/thirtysecond