Last year, myself and colleagues outlined how donors and recipient countries could radically change how health services are financed. In short, we proposed three things:
Locally-led evidence-informed prioritisation
Domestic-first resource allocation
Consolidated supplementary aid
The paper got a lot of interest and so today I’m delighted to publish the results of several collaborations to build on that work.
A New Compact for Global Health Financing: Could Countries and Donors Rewrite the Rule Book on Health Aid?
Link post
Last year, myself and colleagues outlined how donors and recipient countries could radically change how health services are financed. In short, we proposed three things:
Locally-led evidence-informed prioritisation
Domestic-first resource allocation
Consolidated supplementary aid
The paper got a lot of interest and so today I’m delighted to publish the results of several collaborations to build on that work.
You can read it here:
https://bit.ly/3XesmZS
In the above, you will find a summary blog which will take you through the feedback we had and provide links to a set of papers:
• A case study in Ethiopia
• A case study on Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance
• Implications for financing of common goods
• Public financial management considerations
• An exploration of the global political economy
With thanks to co-authors of related pieces: Adrian Gheorghe, Alec Morton, Amanuel Haileselassie, Anastassia D., Jamaica B., Javier Guzman, Mishal Khan, Mizan Habtemichael, Ole F. Norheim, Pete Baker, Solomon Tessema Memirie, and Tesfaye Mesele.