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Global Fund Sets Ambitious Fundraising Target of $15 Billion
GFO Issue 214

Global Fund Sets Ambitious Fundraising Target of $15 Billion

Author:

David Garmaise

Article Type:
News

Article Number: 1

Says if target achieved, 87% of total funding needs for 2014ā€“2016 could be covered

ABSTRACT The Global Fund has set a goal of raising $15 billion for the 2014ā€“2016 replenishment. This is an increase of almost 50% over what was pledged for 2011ā€“2013. The Fund says that if it can raise $15 billion, 87% of the total need for HIV, TB and malaria for 2014ā€“2016 could be covered. Activists say that $15 billion is the minimum amount that should be raised.

The Global Fund wants to raise $15 billion for 2014ā€“2016. The Fund announced the target in a news release issued on the eve of the pre-replenishment meeting in Brussels, Belgium on 9ā€“10 April.

The $15 billion target is an increase of almost 50% over what was pledged for 2011ā€“2013.

ā€œWe have a choice: we can invest now or pay forever,ā€ said Mark Dybul, Executive Director of the Global Fund. ā€œInnovations in science and implementation have given us a historic opportunity to completely control these diseases. If we do not, the long-term costs will be staggering.ā€

Activists said that the $15 billion is the minimum amount that should be raised. (See last section of this article.)

The Global Fund estimates that $87 billion is required for 2014ā€“2016 to bring the HIV, TB and malaria epidemics under control in low- and middle-income countries. This includes contributions from implementing countries, the Global Fund and other international donors.

The estimates are contained in a paper entitled ā€œNeeds Assessmentā€ published by the Global Fund on 8 April. The Global Fund worked with UNAIDS, the World Health Organization, the Stop TB Partnership and the Roll Back Malaria Partnership to come up with its estimates.

The Global Fund estimates that of the $87 billion required, $37 billion (43%) could come from implementing countries and $24 billion (27%) from donors other than the Global Fund. This leaves a gap of $26 billion (30%). The paper says that, in theory, the Global Fund could be asked to finance all of this gap if implementing countries submitted requests to cover the full unmet need.

The Global Fund also says that a contribution of $15 billion from the Fund for 2014ā€“2016 would allow implementing countries and international donors ā€œto cover 87% of the total funding needed to effectively fight the three diseases.ā€

The $37 billion estimate for implementing countries for 2014ā€“2016 represents what the paper calls ā€œambitious but realistic assumptions that countries will continue efforts to boost domestic financingā€ for the three diseases. The Global Fund is assuming that domestic financing will grow by almost 50% from the current level of about $8 billion a year.

The $24 billion estimate for donors other than the Global Fund assumes that financing from these sources will remain relatively constant at current levels. The Global Fund warns that this may be an optimistic assumption given the financial pressures currently facing many donors.

The figure below, taken from the Needs Assessment paper, explains how the Global Fund arrived at its estimate of 87% of resource needs being covered if the Global Fund can raise $15 billion for 2014ā€“2016.

Figure: Potential global coverage of resource needs, 2014ā€“2016

In terms of diseases, the $87 billion estimate breaks out as follows: HIV $58 billion (67%), TB $15 billion (17%) and malaria $14 billion (16%).

The Global Fund estimates that a total of $10.4 billion has been pledged for 2011ā€“2013. The Resource Needs paper says that if the Global Fund were able to raise and invest $15 billion in 2014ā€“2016, it would result in significant gains compared to just maintaining funding at current levels. For example, 17 million TB and multi-drug-resistant TB patients would receive care in 2014ā€“2016, compared to 14 million if funding were maintained at current levels.

According to the Fundā€™s news release, an investment of $15 billion would prevent millions of new cases of malaria, and would save approximately 196,000 additional lives each year compared with current funding levels by preventing a resurgence of malaria. It would also mean preventing more than one million new infections of HIV each year ā€“ saving billions of dollars in care and treatment for the long term. Antiretroviral therapy could become available to more than 18 million people in affected countries by 2016, up from eight million in 2012.

Position of Global Fund advocates

According to the Global Fund Advocates Network (GFAN), advocates support the call for $15 billion for the Global Fund for 2014ā€“2016, but say that this is the minimum amount that should be raised. Advocates called for an ongoing mobilisation effort to raise the ā€œadditionalā€ $11 billion (i.e., the $26 billion gap minus the $15 billion).

GFAN made this comment in a position paper released on 8 April.

GFAN said that some of the reasons why the $15 billion should be considered a minimum is that in the Global Fundā€™s resource needs paper, the assumptions concerning the level of domestic funding are ā€œextremely ambitiousā€ and the assumptions regarding funding from donors other than the Fund are ā€œvery optimistic.ā€

GFAN said that the Needs Assessment paper rightly describes that “we are at a crossroads ā€“ facing the choice between risking the gains made against the three diseases or accelerating progress to save millions more lives and billions of dollars of additional costs over the long-term.ā€

This article was modified shortly after it was first posted on GFO Live in order to add comments from the Global Fund Advocates Network.

The Needs Assessment paper is available on the Global Fund website here. The $10.4 estimate for 2011ā€“2013 comes from another paper on the same site, entitled ā€œOutcome of the Global Fundā€™s Third Replenishment.ā€

This is one of a series of GFO articles on the documents released by the Global Fund for the pre-replenishment meeting in Brussels

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