What & Why of Aid - Global Health Helper
- What: Transfer of resources (funds, expertise, supplies) from donors (nations, orgs) to recipient countries to improve health & health systems.
- Why (Purpose):
- Address health disparities; reduce poverty.
- Strengthen local health infrastructure & capacity.
- Combat global diseases (e.g., HIV, TB, Malaria).
- Emergency relief & humanitarian response.
- Core Types (by Source):
- Bilateral: Government-to-government (e.g., USAID, DFID).
- Multilateral: Via international orgs (WHO, UNICEF, World Bank, GAVI).
- Non-Governmental (NGOs): Independent bodies (e.g., MSF, CARE).
⭐ Developed countries are urged to contribute 0.7% of their Gross National Income (GNI) as Official Development Assistance (ODA).
Big Players & Funds - Aid's Powerhouses
- UN System (Multilateral Aid):
- WHO: Sets global health norms, technical support. HQ: Geneva.
- UNICEF: Focus on child survival, development, protection. HQ: New York.
- UNFPA: Reproductive health, family planning, population data. HQ: New York.
- UNAIDS: Coordinates global action on HIV/AIDS. HQ: Geneva.
- World Bank Group: Provides loans, grants (IBRD & IDA). HQ: Washington D.C.
- Global Health Initiatives (GHIs) & Partnerships:
- Global Fund (GFATM): Finances programs for AIDS, TB, Malaria. HQ: Geneva.
- GAVI, The Vaccine Alliance: Increases access to immunization in poor countries. HQ: Geneva.
- Bilateral Aid Agencies (Gov-to-Gov):
- USAID (USA): Largest bilateral donor.
- FCDO (UK - formerly DFID)
- JICA (Japan)
- Major Foundations:
- Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF): Influential private funder for health & development.
- International NGOs (INGOs):
- Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), CARE International, Save the Children.
⭐ The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM) is a financing mechanism, not an implementing agency; it relies on local expertise.
Aid Forms & India's Angle - Giving & Receiving
-
International Health Aid Forms:
- Financial: Grants (non-repayable), soft loans (concessional).
- Technical Assistance: Expertise, training, technology transfer.
- Material Aid (In-kind): Medicines, medical equipment, food.
- E.g., PPE, ventilators in crises.
- Humanitarian Aid: Emergency relief (disasters, conflicts, epidemics).
- Aid Channels: Bilateral (Gov-to-Gov); Multilateral (WHO, UNICEF, World Bank, GAVI).
-
India's Dual Role:
- As Recipient:
- Historically: Polio eradication, TB control, MCH services.
- Partners: World Bank, Global Fund (GFATM), USAID.
- As Donor ("Health Diplomacy"):
- Focus: South Asian & African nations.
- Areas: Capacity building, generic drugs, medical training, health infra.
- Lines of Credit (LoCs) for health projects.
⭐ Vaccine Maitri (2021): India supplied COVID-19 vaccines to ~100 countries, affirming "Pharmacy of the World" status.
- Key to South-South Cooperation.
- As Recipient:
Effectiveness & Hurdles - Aid's True Worth
- Positive Impacts (Effectiveness):
- Improved health indicators: ↓child & maternal mortality, ↑life expectancy.
- Disease control successes: e.g., Polio, Guinea worm, targeted HIV/TB/Malaria programs.
- Strengthened health systems: Infrastructure, workforce training (often project-specific).
- Key Challenges (Hurdles):
- Aid dependency, undermining local ownership & sustainability.
- Poor coordination: Multiple donors, fragmented projects, high transaction costs.
- Misalignment: Donor-driven agendas vs. national health priorities.
- Corruption & weak governance siphoning resources.
- Brain drain: Migration of trained health personnel.
⭐ The "Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness" (2005) and subsequent Accra Agenda for Action (2008) & Busan Partnership (2011) aim to improve aid quality.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- International Health Aid aims to improve health in developing nations.
- Types: Bilateral (USAID), Multilateral (WHO, World Bank), NGOs.
- Key financiers: Global Fund (HIV, TB, Malaria), GAVI (vaccines).
- Focus: MCH, communicable diseases (CDs), health system strengthening (HSS).
- Paris Declaration principles (Ownership, Alignment, Harmonization) boost aid effectiveness.
- SDG 3 (Good Health & Well-being) is a primary driver.
- India: both recipient and provider of health aid.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app