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International News Economist Examines Innovative Mechanisms for Funding Global Health ProgramsJanuary 8, 2010 The Economist examines the "dramatic" change in funding for projects aimed at fighting diseases in the developing world. "In 1990 more than two-thirds of the $5.6 billion spent on global health assistance came from governments. ... By 2007, when total funding for health reached nearly $22 billion, government spending still made up the lion's share," the magazine writes. "Look closer, though, and it emerges that the yeast which leavened this bread was 'non-traditional' financing. In 2007 private money from firms and charities like the [Bill & Melinda] Gates Foundation eclipsed the total from all sources spent in 1990." As an example of ongoing creative financing efforts, the magazine points to UNITAID, "an agency founded by France, Brazil and three other countries, which is hosted by the World Health Organisation in Geneva and calls itself a 'facility' for the purchase of drugs to fight important diseases. UNITAID's main income comes from a charge on air tickets, levied by a dozen states; combined with cash contributions from other countries, this has raised $1.5 billion in the past four years," and later this month a private foundation linked with UNITAID will begin raising money directly from the public, the magazine notes. The article highlights additional innovative ways agencies are raising money through public-private partnerships, bond issues, aggregating drug demand, patent pools and subsidizing the cost of medicines and vaccines. Also addressed in the article is the challenge of efficient spending and improving the transparency and evaluation of the agencies. Back to other news for January 2010
![]() Devex News Analysis Examines Democratic, Republican Party Platforms on Foreign Policy, Including Global Health This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report. Visit the Kaiser Family Foundation's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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