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Africa: Global Fund Advances
AfricaFocus Bulletin
Mar 4, 2007 (070304)
(Reposted from sources cited below)
Editor's Note
The Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria has a new
executive director. And the Global Fund Observer reports that the
Fund is in better financial shape to cover the anticipated cost of
Round 7 grants than it was at this stage with any of the three
previous rounds. But the fund still needs to triple its funding
levels to meet the estimated needs for the period 2008-2010.
This issue of AfricaFocus Bulletin contains excerpts (excluding
formatted tables) from the most recent issue of the Global Fund
Observer (GFO; http://www.aidspan.org/gfo), a service of Aidspan.
The GFO contains notes from an interview with the new director
Michel Kazatchkine, and reports on other issues being considered by
the Global Fund donors' meeting convening in Oslo this week.
For previous AfricaFocus Bulletins on health issues, visit
http://www.africafocus.org/healthexp.php
++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++++++++
Global Fund Observer (GFO)
Issue 72 - 1 March 2007. (Excerpts only. For formatted web, Word
and PDF versions of this and other issues, see
http://www.aidspan.org/gfo )
[GFO is an independent newsletter about the Global Fund provided by
Aidspan to over 10,000 subscribers Aidspan. Aidspan is a nonprofit
organization that serves as an independent watchdog of the Global
Fund, promoting increased support for, and effectiveness of, the
Fund. GFO Editor and Aidspan Executive Director: Bernard Rivers
(rivers@aidspan.org, +1-212-662-6800).]
1. NEWS: Global Fund Issues Seventh Call for Proposals
The Global Fund today issued its Call for Proposals for countries
wishing to apply for Round 7 grants. The proposal form and various
support documents are available in six languages at
www.theglobalfund.org/en/apply/call7. Applications must be
submitted by 4 July 2007.
The major changes to the Proposal Form compared to the form that
was used for Round 6 are as follows:
- Where the proposal being submitted is similar to a previous
proposal that was not approved, applicants are explicitly asked to
address the comments that the Technical Review Panel (TRP) made
regarding the previous proposal.
- Where the proposal being submitted has some key services in
common with an earlier grant, and significant portions of that
earlier grant have not yet been disbursed, applicants are asked to
explain why the Round 7 proposal covers these same services.
- Where the proposal being submitted specifies a Principal
Recipient (PR) that has had some "performance bottlenecks" with an
existing grant, applicants are asked to explain how these
bottlenecks are addressed in the proposal.
- On the Proposal Form itself, applicants are being asked to submit
less complex information on their budgets.
- Although the Proposal Form for Round 7 contains the same five
sections used in the Round 6 form, some of the information
requested has been moved from one section to another.
Aidspan, publisher of GFO, will produce a guidance document to help
potential applicants with the applications process. "The Aidspan
Guide to Round 7 Applications to the Global Fund" will be posted at
http://www.aidspan.org/guides on Monday or Tuesday March 5 or 6.
This document will also be available in French and Spanish
versions; these versions should be posted on the Aidspan website by
19 March 2007.
All proposals submitted by the closing date will be reviewed by the
Global Fund Secretariat to ensure that they meet the Fund's
eligibility criteria. Eligible proposals will then be forwarded to
the TRP for consideration. The TRP will make recommendations to the
Global Fund Board, which will make its decisions at its board
meeting scheduled for 14-16 November 2007. (In the past, all
proposals recommended by the TRP for approval have indeed been
approved by the Board.)
When the TRP members review the proposals, they will do so in their
personal capacities - they must not share the information with or
accept any instructions from their employers or their national
governments. Once the TRP has assessed each proposal, it will
assign it a rating in one of the following categories:
- Recommended (Category 1): Proposal is recommended for approval.
- Recommended (Category 2): Proposal is recommended for approval,
provided that the applicant responds promptly to a number of
requests by the TRP for clarification or adjustment. (This might be
divided into Categories 2A and 2B.)
- Not Recommended (Category 3): Proposal is not recommended in its
present form, but applicant is encouraged to submit a proposal in
a future round following major revision.
- Not Recommended (Category 4): Proposal is rejected
In allocating each proposal to one of the above categories, the TRP
will take into consideration only technical factors, such as
whether the project described in the proposal is technically sound,
whether it is one that the specified organization(s) are capable of
implementing, and whether it represents good use of the money. The
TRP is required to ignore the question of whether it believes the
Global Fund has enough money to pay for all of the proposals that
it is recommending. If the TRP recommends more proposals than the
Fund has money to finance, it will be for the Board to deal with
the problem. (See next article for information on the funding
available for Round 7).
Once a proposal is approved by the Board, the Secretariat will
enter into a lengthy and complex process of: (a) ensuring that the
applicant answers, to the satisfaction of the TRP, any questions
that the TRP asked regarding the proposal; (b) assessing the
ability of the proposed Principal Recipient (PR) to perform the
role that the proposal assigns to it; and (c) negotiating grant
agreement(s) with the PR. It is only after this multi-month process
that the first cash disbursement will be sent. Thus, although
proposals have to be submitted by 4 July 2007, it is unlikely that
the first funding will be sent for successful proposals before the
middle of 2008.
2. NEWS: Global Fund Is In Good Shape to Pay for Round 7
The Global Fund is in better financial shape to cover the
anticipated cost of Round 7 grants than it was at this stage with
any of the three previous rounds.
The Fund estimates that the total cost for the first two years of
grants likely to be approved in Round 7 will be about $965 million
(about ten percent more than the average cost of the three previous
rounds). Of this, about half ($497 m.) is already available, and
the other half needs to be raised. When the Call for Proposals was
issued for each of the last three rounds, the Fund had less money
available to pay for the grants than it now has for Round 7 - and
in all cases, the Fund raised the needed funds in time.
The information on funding availability for Round 7 is contained in
"Technical Note 2 - Update on the Funding Outlook for 2006-2007,"
one of several documents released by the Fund in preparation for a
meeting of donors to be held in Oslo next week. The documents are
available at www.theglobalfund.org/en/about/replenishment/oslo.
The Global Fund says current fund availability for 2007 is $2,519
million ($208 m. in unused funds from last year, and $2,310 in
pledges thus far for 2007). After setting aside $2,022 m. for
renewals during 2007 of existing grants and for new Round 6 grants
approved following successful appeals, this leaves an availability
of $497 m. for Round 7 grants.
The Fund will certainly receive additional pledges for 2007 during
the balance of the year. In addition, pledges for 2008 can be
applied to successful Round 7 proposals insofar as the actual
contributions arrive prior to the signing of the grant agreements.
Technical Note 2 reveals that pledges and contributions for the
two-year period 2006-2007 thus far total $4.5 billion, about 50
percent more than the $3.0 billion that was pledged and contributed
for the prior two-year period, 2004-2005. The increase will be even
greater once additional pledges for 2007 are received over the rest
of this year.
3. NEWS: Board Ruling Prevents Exclusion of Three
Upper-Middle-Income Countries From Round 7 Eligibility
The Global Fund Board has decided that any country whose economy is
classified as upper-middle-income, and that had a high enough
disease burden to be eligible to apply for Round 6 HIV/AIDS grants,
will also be eligible to apply in Round 7. As a result, South
Africa, Botswana and Equatorial Guinea will not be excluded from
Round 7 eligibility as they would have been if this ruling had not
been made.
Under rules in place since before Round 6, organisations from
upper-middle income countries are eligible to apply only if they
can demonstrate that their country faces a high current national
disease burden. For HIV/AIDS, "high disease burden" was defined by
a complicated formula - specifically, that adult HIV prevalence
multiplied by 1000, divided by Gross National Income (GNI) per
capita, must exceed five.
There have been some changes in GNI since the launch of Round 6
such that, if this formula were retained for Round 7, three
upper-middle-income countries whose ratios previously exceeded five
(South Africa, Botswana and Equatorial Guinea) would no longer
qualify for Global Fund financing for HIV/AIDS. The Global Fund
says that the change in the eligibility status of these three
countries is more closely linked to currency fluctuations that
affected the countries' GNI, than it is to any material increase in
the countries' wealth or decrease in their HIV prevalence. ...
4. INTERVIEW: Michel Kazatchkine, the Fund's New Executive Director
After Michel Kazatchkine was selected to be the next Executive
Director of the Global Fund, GFO interviewed him by phone. Here are
excerpts from what he said.
On timing: I'll join the Fund as its new Executive Director as soon
as possible after April 1, and definitely by the time of the April
25-27 board meeting. Between now and the end of March, when Dr.
Feachem's term of office ends, I will in no way interfere in the
Fund or its affairs, or be in the building, except for a meeting
with Dr. Feachem during the week of March 19. I cannot start on
April 1 because of a number of duties including in my clinic.
I'm currently in a listening and thinking mode, and intend to
remain in that mode until I take office. So today I'm not in a
position to be extremely specific [about changes I might want to
introduce], but of course I've been thinking about them a lot.
On broad strategy: I said to the Board that I see no reason to
revisit the Fund's business model at this time. I expect the Fund
to continue to grow because the needs remain largely unmet, and
because we need to strengthen health systems in order to
consolidate the investments and ensure sustainability of the
investments. I don't like the "horizontal versus vertical" debate
[where "horizontal" means spending money on health systems, and
"vertical" means spending it on specific diseases]. I do believe
the Fund can gain major benefits from strengthening health systems.
But I don't accept that vertical funds are unhelpful. As Executive
Director I'm ready, on a scientific basis, to advocate for the
disease-focused model.
The Fund's business model is efficient. 85% of the grants are
working well; but let's try to get it to 98%; I think we can move
towards that.
On size: I endorse the aspirational goal of the Fund raising $8 to
10 billion annually, but we need a strategy to meet the resource
goal that we set for the Fund. I hope the Policy and Strategy
Committee will be ambitious in both the goal it sets and its
strategy to reach the goal. If the Fund is not ambitious, who will
be? The added value of the Fund is its size and its ability to make
a difference.
On the role of the public sector: If we talk of increasing the
Fund's operations by billions, the primary driver is the public
sector. We need to work with them on the sustainability of the
resources. That means ODA [Official Development Assistance,
provided by Western donor governments.] I'm still struck by the
fact that although everyone has health as a priority for ODA, the
health portion of ODA is growing less fast than ODA as a whole. And
ODA as a whole is still behind the 0.7 percent goal that the
international community has set. If they had met 0.7, we wouldn't
have all these problems.
Then there is the need for innovative methods [for raising money
from Western governments]. There are two models, with hopefully
more to come. First is UNITAID [a new international drug purchase
facility], to which I'm committed. The second is IFF [International
Finance Facility]. IFF could bring the billions that are needed; I
look forward to seeing greater progress with IFF.
On civil society: The involvement of civil society, and of people
living with the diseases, is the unique feature of the Fund. It's
"win-win" - the Fund has learned and benefited from the advocacy
and other strengths of civil society, but it has also been of
benefit to civil society, in that it has enabled civil society to
acquire more institutional capacity.
On foundations: The move by Bill and Melinda Gates in Toronto [to
give $500 million to the Global Fund] was very significant. They
are very strongly committed to advancing health in the developing
world. But they don't want to build a new health channel that they
control; they are confident in the Global Fund, and believe in its
legitimacy. I'm really hopeful and confident that we can get more
funding from the foundations sector.
Re the business sector: I think this is an open space; we are still
on very preliminary ground. I hope and believe we can increase the
Product (RED) initiative; I hope it will spread more into Europe.
I hope we can also have other business sector initiatives. But I
hope also that businesses can get more into co-investment [in which
businesses in developing countries contribute their clinics,
doctors, etc. to projects that are financed by the Fund]. I don't
think that the private sector has a culture yet of working with
multilateral entities like the Fund.
Re the UN system: When UN agencies provide technical support to
GF-backed projects, they are not working "for" the Fund, they are
implementing their mandate, and working for the global good.
Everyone is cooperating to make the money work. One of my first
efforts will be to establish a strong relationship with them. I've
already spoken with Margaret Chan [head of WHO] and Peter Piot
[head of UNAIDS].
Re the GF staff: The Secretariat has to be kept lean and focused.
I'm not in favour of country offices for the GF. We can work with
and through UN country offices to get better flows of information
to and from the countries. As we enter the next phase of the GF, we
can hope to have everyone at the Secretariat feeling confident, at
ease, enthusiastic. It's up to me to be an effective
people-oriented manager. I'll arrange for there to be a management
audit to help us see where changes need to be made. I've sent a
letter to all staff, through the Executive Director, in which I say
that I want, within the limits of my physical abilities, to be
always available for them. I will really focus on staff morale. I
know many people there. They need a restored confidence and sense
of stability.
Re whether the Executive Director should become a Board member
(though without a vote): We need to work hard at distinguishing
between the mandates of the Board and of the ED. The Board has at
times had a tendency to micromanage. We need not so much a change
in structure as a change of spirit. If the relationship between the
Board and the ED is one of trust and confidence, and a spirit of
one team working together, I don't see any further gain in making
a formal change.
5. NEWS: Global Fund Identifies Resource Needs for 2008-2010
In preparation for the Second Replenishment Meeting to be held in
Oslo on 5-7 March 2007, the Global Fund has prepared a projection
of its resource needs for the three-year period from 2008 to 2010.
As it has done in the past, the Fund has developed two estimates,
one based on projected demands on the Fund through proposals that
are received and approved, and the other based on the Fund's share
of the estimated global needs for the fight against HIV/AIDS, TB
and malaria. The Fund says that over the three years 2008-2010 it
will have an average annual need of $5.0 billion based on a
mid-range estimate of projected demand, and of $7.2 billion based
on its share of global needs. (In 2006 the Fund received $2.2
billion, and in 2007 it expects to receive in excess of $2.3
billion.)
In arriving at its "projected demand" estimate, the Global Fund
calculated the resources that will be required to fund or renew
grants that have already been approved, and to fund new grants that
it expects will be approved during 2008-2010. It evaluated three
different scenarios, based on different assumptions about how much
demand will be generated.
And in arriving at its "share of global needs" estimate, the Global
Fund took projections of global needs for the three diseases that
have been developed by the international community, and then
calculated the Global Fund's share of these needs. It assumed that
the Fund's share for 2008-2010 will be the same as its current
share of international financing for the three diseases - i.e.,
about two-thirds for tuberculosis and malaria, and about 20 percent
for HIV/AIDS. (This was based, in turn, on an assumption that
funding through other channels will increase at the same pace as
will funding through the Fund.)
The Global Fund's estimate of its resource needs for 2008-2010 are
summarized in the following table. [for table see
http://www.aidspan.org/gfo]
By developing projections of resource needs over a three-year
period, the Global Fund is hoping to encourage donors to make
multi-year funding commitments (see next article).
These resource-need projections are described in a document
entitled "Resource Needs - Funding the Global Fight Against
HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria - Resource Needs for the Global
Fund 2008-2010," available at http://.theglobalfund.org/en/about/replenishment/oslo.
6. ANALYSIS: Which Countries Should Give How Much to the Global
Fund?
Donor countries will meet in Oslo, Norway, next week for the first
of two "Replenishment" meetings to discuss how much they might give
to the Global Fund for the three years 2008-2010. (The second
meeting will take place in September, in Berlin.)
Over the years, several formulae have been advanced for calculating
what might constitute each country's "fair share" of the Global
Fund's financial needs. The first widely-discussed such formula was
the Equitable Contributions Framework, advanced in 2002 within the
NGO sector and then further developed by Aidspan, publisher of GFO.
The basis of that formula was that countries should contribute in
proportion to the size of their respective economies.
In preparation for next week's Oslo meeting, the Global Fund has
prepared a Technical Note in which it outlines five possible
formulae, or "contribution scenarios," for obtaining the money that
the Fund needs for 2008-2010. (See "Technical Note 1 - Contribution
Scenarios in Selected Replenishments," at
http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/about/replenishment/oslo). The
scenarios are:
Scenario 1 (the "Pro-Rata" scenario): Each country contributes a
share of the need that is equal to its share of all contributions
given to the Fund during 2003-2006.
Scenarios 2, 3 and 4 are based on each country's share of
contributions made to other international funds, and are not
pursued further here.
Scenario 5 (the "Adjusted GNI" scenario): Each country contributes
a share of the need that is equal to its share of global Gross
National Income (GNI), adjusted by GNI per capita. (The adjustment
is made so that if two countries have the same GNI, but one has a
much larger population and hence a lower GNI per capita, the
country with the smaller population contributes more, because it
has a greater ability to give.) The Adjusted GNI scenario is very
similar to the Equitable Contributions Framework.
In an introduction to the Technical Note, the Global Fund says that
the scenarios were prepared at the request of donors. However, it
also says that the development of the scenarios was a "purely
mechanical exercise," done for "illustrative purposes," and not
done in an "attempt to assign shares to donors."
To supplement these scenarios developed by the Fund, GFO has
developed two "bad scenarios" to illustrate the possible thinking
of some donors:
Scenario 0 (the "No Increase" scenario): Each country contributes
the same dollar amount per year that it has averaged in recent
years, even though the need has increased significantly.
Scenario 6 (the "Minimum of '1' and '5' " scenario): Each country
contributes the lesser of what it should contribute according to
Scenarios 1 and 5. (Some countries will have to contribute more
under Scenario 1; others will have to contribute more under
Scenario 5. So there is a real possibility that many will choose
whichever is the less painful.)
The Technical Note contains a series of tables outlining what the
contribution of each donor country would be under each of Scenarios
1 through 5. The tables include contributions from private
foundations, the private sector and innovative financing schemes.
To complicate matters somewhat, there is no agreement yet on what
the total amount is that has to be given to the Fund each year. As
discussed in the previous article, the 2008 need could be as little
as $3.4 b., and the 2010 need could be as much at $7.7 b. - or
more. In what follows, we show different ways of dividing up the
mid-range "Scenario B" need of $5.0 b. per year, or $15 b. over the
three years.
As shown in the following table, if all countries follow Scenario
0, the Global Fund will only receive $5.1 billion of the $15
billion three-year need. And if all countries follow Scenario 6, in
which each one chooses the less painful of Scenarios 1 and 5, the
Fund will only receive $11.7 billion, $3.3 billion less than is
necessary. [for table see http://www.aidspan.org/gfo.
AfricaFocus Bulletin is an independent electronic publication
providing reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with
a particular focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus
Bulletin is edited by William Minter.
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