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SEVEN COUNTRIES IN THE EECA REGION PROJECTED TO TRANSITION BY 2025
GFO Issue 299

SEVEN COUNTRIES IN THE EECA REGION PROJECTED TO TRANSITION BY 2025

Author:

Tinatin Zardiashvili

Article Type:
News

Article Number: 8

Overview on the GFā€™s 2017 Eligibility List and Transition Projection Tool

ABSTRACT This article provides Eastern Europe and Central Asia (EECA) region-related information from recently published documents namely, the Global Fundā€™s Eligibility List 2017 and Projected Transitions from Global Fund Support by 2025.

Following the Global Fundā€™s recent replenishment in September, the country eligibility list for the 2017-2019 grant cycleĀ has been published. This list identifies the countries and disease components that are eligible to receive funding from the Global Fund for the next three years.

Eligibility List

The list is reflective of the Global Fundā€™s new Eligibility Policy, where countries with higher disease burdens and lower income levels continue to be prioritized for investment (see previousĀ GFO article on eligibility). However, just because a country is listed as eligible for Global Fund grants does not guarantee an allocation. The Fund is expected to notify countries of their allocation amounts by mid-December 2016.

Countries in the EECA region have been bracing for limited eligibility and reduced allocations. Aidspan has previously reported that this regionā€™s allocation for the 2017-2019 period will be about half the size it was in 2014-2016 (seeĀ GFO story).

For this region, the countries and disease components which are eligible for Global Fund grants in 2017-2019 are presented in Table 1.

Table 1: EECA countries listed alphabetically in the income group: eligible disease components and burden

EECA Countries by Income Category
Disease Component
Disease Burden
Eligibility
UMI
Albania
HIV
Low
Transition 2015
Albania
TB
Low
Transition 2015
Albania
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Azerbaijan
HIV
High
Yes
Azerbaijan
TB
Severe
Yes
Azerbaijan
Malaria
Moderate
Not eligible
Belarus
HIV
High
Yes
Belarus
TB
High
Yes
Belarus
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Bulgaria
HIV
High
Not eligible
Bulgaria
TB
Moderate
Transition 2016
Bulgaria
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Georgia
HIV
High
Yes
Georgia
TB
High
Yes
Georgia
Malaria
Moderate
Not eligible
Kazakhstan
HIV
High
Yes
Kazakhstan
TB
Severe
Yes
Kazakhstan
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Romania
HIV
High
Not eligible
Romania
TB
High
Yes
Romania
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Turkmenistan
HIV
Low
Not eligible
Turkmenistan
TB
Low
Transition 2016
Turkmenistan
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Upper-LMI
Armenia
HIV
Moderate
Yes
Armenia
TB
Moderate
Yes
Armenia
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Kosovo
HIV
Low
Yes
Kosovo
TB
Low
Yes
Kosovo
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Ukraine
HIV
High
Yes
Ukraine
TB
Severe
Yes
Ukraine
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Lower-LMI
Kyrgyzstan
HIV
High
Yes
Kyrgyzstan
TB
Severe
Yes
Kyrgyzstan
Malaria
Moderate
Yes
Moldova
HIV
High
Yes
Moldova
TB
Severe
Yes
Moldova
Malaria
Low
Not eligible
Tajikistan
HIV
High
Yes
Tajikistan
TB
Severe
Yes
Tajikistan
Malaria
Moderate
Yes
Uzbekistan
HIV
High
Yes
Uzbekistan
TB
Severe
Yes
Uzbekistan
Malaria
Moderate
Yes

UMI = Upper Middle Income, LMI = Lower Middle Income

The eligibility list also includes countries which are currently transitioning to domestic funding: Albaniaā€™s HIV and TB components as well as Bulgaria and Turkmenistanā€™s TB components will transition out of Global Fund support over the 2017-2019 period. These countries will receive one final transition grant during this time, aimed at facilitating smooth handover by the end of 2019. In accordance with the Global Fundā€™sĀ Sustainability, Transition and Co-Financing Policy, the amount and length of transition funding will be decided by the Secretariat, based both upon the context and upon portfolio considerations. This funding will not exceed a period of three years. In addition, high income countries are not eligible for transition funding.

Bulgaria meets the NGO rule criteria (see Box) of the Global Fundā€™s Eligibility Policy, meaning that country can take the opportunity to revive certain programs which already ended in 2016. Bulgariaā€™s Global Fund HIV grant was meant to end on 31 December 2015, but a no-cost extension carried it into 2016.

Box: NGO Rule in Global Fundā€™s New Eligibility Policy (2016)

Upper-middle income countries not listed on the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Developmentā€™s (OECD) Development Assistance Committee list of official development assistance recipients are eligible to receive an allocation for HIV and AIDS funding only if they have a reported disease burden of ā€˜Highā€™, ā€˜Severeā€™ or ā€˜Extremeā€™ and are eligible to apply for such funds only if the following conditions are met:

a. Confirmation that the allocation will be used to fund interventions that are not being provided due to political barriers and are supported by the countryā€™s epidemiology;

b. Confirmation that: (i) the application will be submitted by a non-CCM or other multi-stakeholder coordinating body; and (ii) the program will be managed by a nongovernmental organization (NGO) within the country in which activities would be implemented;

c. The government of such country shall not directly receive any funding; and d. Applicants meet all other applicable requirements as set forth in the Sustainability, Transition and Co-financing Policy, as amended from time to time.

Countries without any eligible components are not included into the list. In the EECA region, the ineligible countries are the Russian Federation (RF), Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Croatia and Macedonia. This news was expected, as these countries were already aware with regard to their current or impending ineligibility. GFO has reviewed some opinions about program sustainability in RF and Balkan countries (See GFO articlesĀ here,Ā hereĀ andĀ here).

There is a degree of opportunity for excluded countries to be included in regional or multi-country applications; but even in such cases, a minimum of 51% of participating countries must still be eligible for receiving funding for the disease addressed in the group application.

The Global Fund strongly encourages all upper-middle income countries, regardless of disease burden, and all lower-middle income countries with low or moderate disease burden should be doing sustainability and transition planning over the 2017-2019 period. The STC policy urges these plans to be integrated into national strategic plans.

The EECA region has already made significant steps in transition planning. From 2014, the requirement of the Global Fund was that all programs submitted under the new funding mechanism should contain the transition planning component. Currently, all countries in the EECA are at certain stage of the planning. The priority of all regional programs funded under the new funding mechanism is the empowering of communities to advocate for increased domestic funding and for risk-free and responsible transitioning. However, maintaining the services for key affected populations in most countries remains uncertain.

Anna Dovbakh, Executive Director of Strategy, Development and Governance Team atĀ Eurasian Harm Reduction Network (EHRN), stated that ā€œusing only WorldĀ Bank economic growth indications are not fair for countries, especially in the case of massive cuts to donor funding for HIV. The Global Fund knows better than anyone that in some countries in the region, the transition to domestic funding will cause the disappearance of all developed services for key affected populations.”

Transition Projections

The Global Fund hasĀ also publishedĀ a list of countriesĀ which are projected to become ineligible over the next ten years (up to 2025), and will therefore be faced with transition. This list is intended to support adequate planning ahead of transition, encourage timely submissions for transition grants, and help countries identify technical support needs in order to facilitate a smooth and sustainable transition for each country.

The transition projection for the period leading up to 2025 in the EECA region covers seven countries out of the fifteen listed in Table 1.Ā  The details are provided in the Table 2 below.

Table 2. Transition Projections 2016-2025 for the EECA Region
Albania (HIV, TB) Bulgaria (TB) Turkmenistan (TB) These three countries have been newly ineligible since the 2014-2016 allocation period. However, they may receive transition funding in 2017-2019.
Armenia (HIV, TB) Kosovo (HIV, TB) Projected to become ineligible in 2017-2019, due to the transition of their national income to UMI status. However, they may receive transition funding in 2020-2022.
Romania (TB) Projected to become ineligible in 2020-2022 as a High Income status country in the periods in question therefore, will not be eligible for transition funding.
Kazakhstan (HIV, TB) Projected to become ineligible in 2023-2025 as a High Income status country Ā in the periods in question, therefore, will not be eligible for transition funding.

These transition projections are based on forecasted gross national income per capita and current disease burden data. Current disease data is used instead of projected burden following the recommendations of the technical partners (WHO, UNAIDS, Stop TB partnership and Roll Back Malaria). For the most part, the reason given is because the projected disease burden is not very relevant to transition readiness. TB case notification rates and historic malaria morbidity and mortality ā€“ the Global Funds eligibility indicators ā€“ do not lend particularly well to future projections, either. Further, there are unlikely to be significant changes in HIV prevalence over the next 10 years.

The Global Fund has emphasized that the projection list is to be considered as an additional resource, designed to support long-term transition planning. These transition projections are not intended to be binding determinations or statements of Global Fund policy. It is important to remember that transition projections are based only on current data, and therefore are subject to change or revision at a later point.

Pavlo Skala, Assosiate Director of Policy and Partnership at the Alliance for Public Health-APH in Ukraine said ā€œThe changes developed by the Global Fund will help countries to protect key affected populations and will support financial and programmatic sustainability of HIV and TB programs.ā€ The APH is a Principal Recipient (PR) of Global Fund Grants in Ukraine. ā€œI am glad,ā€ he continues, noting that ā€œthe lessons are learned and now the donor will help us to avoid the painful experiences of some EECA countries that just closed programs and missed the transition phase.ā€

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