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ALLOCATION LETTERS SHED FURTHER LIGHT ON CATALYTIC INVESTMENT PRIORITIES
GFO Issue 303

ALLOCATION LETTERS SHED FURTHER LIGHT ON CATALYTIC INVESTMENT PRIORITIES

Author:

Gemma Oberth

Article Type:
News

Article Number: 1

Letters specify which countries are eligible for matching funds

ABSTRACT On 15 December 2016, the Global Fund Secretariat notified all countries of their allocation amounts for the 2017-2019 grant cycle. The allocation letters shed light on which countries are eligible to access additional funding on top of their country allocations, through catalytic investments called ā€œmatching fundsā€. Aidspan has collected allocation letters from 25 countries to create greater transparency around these catalytic investment priorities.

*Editorā€™s Note: Since the publication of this article, the Global Fund has subsequently made all information about matching funds publicly available on its website:

On 15 December 2016, the Global Fund Secretariat notified all countries of their allocation amounts for the 2017-2019 grant cycle (seeĀ GFO article). The allocation letters contain critical information on the funding available for the three diseases, the kind of application that the country is invited to submit (seeĀ GFO article), co-financing requirements, the implementation period for the grants, and whether or not the country is eligible for any additional funding through catalytic investments.

Aidspan has collected 25 allocation letters from CCMs and other country stakeholders in an effort to create greater transparency, particularly around catalytic investment priorities and the eligibility of countries to access matching funds. Aidspan has already made a call for these letters to be made public by the Global Fund (seeĀ GFO article). There is nothing secret or sensitive in the letters and by not making them public, the Fund is failing to live up to its commitment to transparency.

At the country level, catalytic investments called ā€œmatching fundsā€ are available to certain eligible countries on top of their allocation amounts.Ā  There is $356 million available for matching funds, across seven priority areas: HIV – Key Populations Impact; HIV – Human Rights; HIV – Adolescent Girls and Young Women; Incentivising Programming of Allocations to find missing TB Cases; Catalyzing Market Entry of New Long Lasting Insecticide Treated Nets (LLINs); Integration of Service Delivery and Health Workforce Improvements; Data systems, data generation and use for programmatic action and quality improvement. 80% of matching funds will go directly to country programs. Matching funds are part of the $800 million set aside for catalytic investments (seeĀ GFO articleĀ for a full list of catalytic investment priorities and amounts).

Although the country allocation amounts are made public onĀ the Global Fundā€™s website, there is very little transparency around how the $356 million in matching funds will be meted out. This information is (so far) only contained in the country allocation letters. Matching fundsĀ are intended to incentivize the programming of allocations towards key strategic priorities. While the exact amount of matching funds will be awarded at the time of funding request review, the allocation letters specify the catalytic investment priority and the amount of matching funds that a country may be eligible for (Table 1).

Table 1: Catalytic investment priorities and matching funds available for select countries over the 2017-2019 grant cycle

Country
Catalytic Investment Priority
Matching Funds Available
Belize
Not eligible for matching funds
$0
Botswana
HIV: Programs to remove human rights-related barriers to health services
$1,000,000
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$1,000,000
Burkina Faso
RSSH: Data systems, data generation, data use
ā‚¬1,782,200
(approx. $1,881,700)
Central African Republic
Not eligible for matching funds
$0
Colombia
Not eligible for matching funds
$0
Congo (Democratic Republic)
HIV: Programs to remove human rights-related barriers to health services
$3,000,000
TB: Finding missing TB cases
$10,000,000
RSSH: Data systems, data generation, data use
$3,000,000
Ghana
HIV: Key populations impact
$3,600,000
HIV: Programs to remove human rights-related barriers to health services
$2,300,000
Guinea
RSSH: Integrated service delivery and health
workforce
$3,000,000
Jamaica
HIV: Key populations impact
$1,100,000
HIV: Programs to remove human rights-related barriers to health services
$1,000,000
Kenya
HIV: Key populations impact
$10,000,000
HIV: Programs to remove human rights-related barriers to health services
$3,800,000
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$5,000,000
TB: Finding missing TB cases
$6,000,000
Lesotho
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$1,500,000
Malawi
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$7,000,000
RSSH: Data systems, data generation, data use
$3,000,000
Morocco
Not eligible for matching funds
$0
Mozambique
HIV: Programs to remove human rights-related barriers to health services
$4,700,000
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$6,000,000
TB: Finding missing TB cases
$6,000,000
RSSH: Data systems, data generation, data use
$3,000,000
Namibia
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$1,000,000
Niger
Not eligible for matching funds
$0
Nigeria
TB: Finding missing TB cases
$14,000,000
Rwanda
Not eligible for matching funds
$0
Senegal
HIV: Key populations impact
ā‚¬980,210
(approx. $1,034,935)
HIV: Programs to remove human rights-related
barriers to health services
ā‚¬1,247,540
(approx. $1,317,190)
South Africa
HIV: Programs to remove human rights-related barriers to health services
$5,000,000
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$5,000,000
TB: Finding missing TB cases
$6,000,000
Swaziland
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$1,500,000
Tanzania
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$8,000,000
TB: Finding missing TB cases
$6,000,000
RSSH: Data systems, data generation, data use
$3,000,000
Uganda
HIV: Programs to remove human rights-related
barriers to health services
$4,400,000
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$5,000,000
Zambia
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$4,000,000
RSSH: Integrated service delivery and health workforce
$3,000,000
Zimbabwe
HIV: Key populations impact
$10,000,000
HIV: Adolescent girls and young women
$8,000,000
*Source: allocation letters

The total amount of matching funds that these countries are eligible for is about $173 million, nearly half of all matching funds available. Among the countries sampled, Kenya is eligible for the greatest amount of matching funds on top of its allocation, with $24.8 million in matching funds available across four priority areas.

It is unclear what specific criteria are used to determine the catalytic investment priorities or the amounts for these countries. The Global Fund has stated that catalytic priorities and the associated amounts are pre-defined by the Strategy Committee, with the Secretariat mapping specific disease programs and identifying applicable countries based on epidemiological contexts. Then, matching funds are divided between applicable country components in proportion to their underlying allocation amounts. Potential for impact and country capacity are also taken into consideration. Yet, eligibility for matching funds is not entirely transparent.

Among the 25 countries presented in Table 1, Congo (Democratic Republic), Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Africa and Tanzania are the only ones eligible for TB matching funds, despite Lesotho, Malawi, Namibia, Swaziland, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe also populating theĀ World Health Organizationā€™s listĀ of the top 30 high burden countries for TB. Not a single country in Table 1 is eligible for malaria matching funds, even though Congo (Democratic Republic), Mozambique, Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda are five ofĀ six countriesĀ that account for 103 million malaria cases each year, nearly half the global total. Congo (Democratic Republic) and Nigeria account for more than 40% of global malaria deaths.

The Global Fund has indicated a list of priority countries for intensive human rights and gender equality interventions over 2017-2022, in line with specific sub-objectives in the Global FundsĀ new strategyĀ (Figure 1). This may have some bearing over how matching funds for adolescent girls and young women, key populations and removing human rights-related barriers to health services are determined.

Figure 1: The Global Fundā€™s priority countries for intensive rights and gender interventions over 2017-2022, as per the Global Fund StrategyĀ Ā 

Matching Funds

Matching funds are made available to incentivize the programming and use of country allocations towards strategic priorities of the Global Fund and its partners. It is important to note that matching funds are not guaranteed funding for the country. Instead, matching funds are made available only if certain conditions are met.

To be awarded matching funds a country must demonstrate:

  • An increase in the allocation amount designated to the relevant catalytic investment priority, compared to the budget levels in Global Fund grants from the 2014-2016 allocation period. At minimum this designated allocation amount should equal (or be more than) the amount of available matching funds.
  • A corresponding increase in programmatic targets and coverage anticipated through both the increased use of country allocations and use of matching funds towards the relevant catalytic investment priority.

Example scenario for accessing matching funds:

Country X is eligible for $2,000,000 in key populations matching funds. In the last funding cycle (2014-2016), Country X invested $500,000 of their Global Fund allocation in key population programming. To access the $2,000,000 in matching funds available to them in the new grant cycle, Country X would have to increase its investment from $500,000 to a minimum of $2,000,000 of their 2017-2019 allocation in key population programming. Second, Country X would need to set a corresponding increase in their programmatic targets in line with the total $4,000,000 in available funding (total = allocation investment + matching funds).

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