Kaiser/UNAIDS Study Finds Donor Government Funding for HIV Rose to
US$8.1 Billion in 2017 due to Shift in Timing of U.S. Support
Most Donor Governments Decreased
Support
Donor government disbursements to combat HIV in
low- and middle-income countries increased 16 percent from US$7 billion in
2016 to US$8.1 billion in 2017 – though the higher total stems largely from
the timing of U.S. funding and is not expected to last, a new report from the Kaiser Family Foundation and
the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) finds.
The increase follows
two years of declines in donor support for HIV and results largely from a
boost by the United States, the world’s largest donor nation, which increased
disbursement from US$4.9 billion in 2016 to US$5.9 billion 2017, including
funds appropriated but not spent from previous years. New U.S. appropriations
have been flat for several years, suggesting that future disbursements will
likely fall back to prior levels.
While eight of 14
donor governments reduced their spending on global HIV efforts in 2017,
increases by the U.S. and five other donors more than offset these
declines. Bilateral aid went up, due to the U.S. increase. Multilateral
contributions to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria also
increased.
Donor government
funding supports HIV care and treatment, prevention and other services in
low- and middle-income countries. The report notes that without new
commitments by other donor governments, however, future funding for HIV is
likely to return to lower levels.
“UNAIDS is deeply
concerned that a lack of sufficient resources will mean more deaths and more
new HIV infections that can be prevented,” said Michel SidibĂ©, UNAIDS
Executive Director. “Even a 20% cut in international funding would be
catastrophic for the 44 countries who rely on international assistance for at
least 75% of their national HIV responses.
“This year’s increase
is more an anomaly than a trend as it doesn’t reflect new resources,” said
Kaiser Family Foundation Vice President Jen Kates, Director of Global Health
and HIV Policy. “Going forward, the urgency to identify alternative funding
sources grows if the global community wants to reach its HIV targets.”
After the U.S., the governments making the largest
contributions to global HIV efforts include the U.K. (US$743.9.million),
France (US$267.7 million), the Netherlands (US$202.6 million), and Germany
(US$161.9 million).
The new report,
produced as a long-standing partnership between the Kaiser Family Foundation
and UNAIDS, provides the latest data available on donor government funding
based on data provided by governments. It includes their bilateral assistance
to low- and middle-income countries and contributions to the Global Fund as
well as UNITAID. “Donor government funding” refers to disbursements, or
payments, made by donors. Donor contributions to multilateral organizations
are counted as part of their disbursements.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the
Kaiser Family Foundation is a nonprofit organization based in San Francisco,
California.
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Wednesday, July 18, 2018
Kaiser/UNAIDS Study Finds Donor Government Funding for HIV Rose to US$8.1 Billion in 2017 due to Shift in Timing of U.S. Support
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