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UNAIDS Economics Reference Group Meeting November 8-9, 2012 Stephen Resch and Robert Hecht Cross-country comparison of domestic AIDS expenditure and medium-term.

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Presentation on theme: "UNAIDS Economics Reference Group Meeting November 8-9, 2012 Stephen Resch and Robert Hecht Cross-country comparison of domestic AIDS expenditure and medium-term."— Presentation transcript:

1 UNAIDS Economics Reference Group Meeting November 8-9, 2012 Stephen Resch and Robert Hecht Cross-country comparison of domestic AIDS expenditure and medium-term fiscal space for AIDS programs

2 Objective  What proportion of AIDS spending is coming from domestic versus external sources?  How much more of the financial burden of AIDS programs could countries reasonably shoulder themselves?  With maximum domestic effort to support AIDS programs, what level of external resources would still be required from external sources such as PEPFAR, Global Fund, etc to meet the overall needs to operate an effective national AIDS program?  How can we monitor implementation of Partnership Frameworks agreements?

3 Main findings 1.Room for domestic AIDS spending to double or triple in medium term 2.Major work needed to strengthen financial information NEEDS ESTIMATION  National strategic planning with credible resource needs estimates EXPENDITURE TRACKING  Development and routine financial tracking to monitor PEPFAR Partnership Framework agreements  Need to improve turnaround time, completeness, comparability of ad hoc expenditure analysis (e.g. NASA, NHA) 3.More work needed to explain variation between countries in resource estimates and AIDS spending per person living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA)

4 Scope of study (1) a retrospective review of AIDS program financing, comparing countries to one another and to selected benchmarks (2) a forward-looking analysis assessment of the potential for increasing domestic financing of AIDS programs Twelve original PEPFAR focus countries (Over 50% of global AIDS burden) BotswanaCote d’IvoireEthiopiaKenyaMozambiqueNamibia NigeriaSouth AfricaRwandaTanzaniaUgandaZambia

5 Domestic AIDS Expenditure Per PLWHATotal (millions)

6 Evaluating domestic effort and assessing the potential for ‘fair’ increase in domestic financing of AIDS programs 1.Abuja Target for Government Health Expenditure (and proportional increase in AIDS spending) 2.AIDS Share of Health Spending in proportion to disease burden share (measured in DALYs) FOUR IMPORTANT CAVEATS: Government health expenditure (GHE) is not a clean measure of domestically-sourced funding [Domestic Share of GHE ~70% (40-110%)] Opportunity cost of increased AIDS spending / Cost-effectiveness Consideration of downstream savings Disease burden share may decline with ART scale up, while resource need remains Normative benchmarks

7 Variation in government health spending levels Abuja target: GHE/GGE = 15% Issue: GHE  Public Funds for Health (PFH), GHE doesn’t exclude ‘on-budget’ donor aid** Variation in the size of resource bucket from which AIDS programs are domestically financed GHE per capita varies 5-fold among current LICs Botswana GHEpc is 2.5 times other 2 UMICs Abuja

8 GDP Which bucket of money is the appropriate reference point for evaluating domestic effort  Countries vary widely in the share of national resources flowing into downstream public resource buckets.  AIDS spending lies primarily in the health sector and could be bound by GHE level GGE (17-48% GDP) GHE (5-18% GGE) GAE (1-26% GHE) What does it say about a country’s AIDS financing effort if a health ministry allocates a relatively large portion of the health budget to AIDS, but this level of GAE is low relative to GDP, because the health budget is relatively small? At what level of government are AIDS resource allocations determined?

9 Variation in government AIDS expenditure (GAE) as a share of health spending …compared to AIDS’ share of disease burden Countries fall into 3 groups:  Kenya, Uganda & Ethiopia (70-90%)  Namibia, Botswana, Zambia, South Africa, and Cote d’ Ivoire (29-54%)  Nigeria, Tanzania, Mozambique, Rwanda (5-12%)

10 Summary Indicators of Domestic Priority for AIDS UNAIDS DALY DIPI and Health Expenditure-based DIPI

11 Potential for increase fiscal space for AIDS Three scenarios for increasing domestic GAE Actual = Status Quo, Abuja = (GHE/GGE=15%), DALY Share = GAE/GHE proportional to AIDS DALY share, Abuja & DALY = Maximal domestic contribution Domestic AIDS spending per PLWHA Similar countries: ZAM, TZA, RWA, NAM, BWA Similar countries: UGN Similar countries: ZAF, NGA, ETH Countries fell into 3 groups… Abuja target already met, All opportunity in DALY share only DALY share target nearly met, All opportunity in Abuja only Opportunity for both meeting Abuja and DALY share targets

12 Resource needs estimates  Difficult to assess the reasonableness of this variation  Not simply explained by input price levels (GNI proxy)  Partly explained by the scale or mix of planned activities?  Inaccurate estimation or ‘gaming’? NSP estimates, adjusted for epidemic size, vary much more than UNAIDS Investment Framework model

13 Scenarios for Increasing Domestic Effort: Annualized Amounts for 2012-16. Scenario Government AIDS Expenditure UNAIDS: $7.4 B NEEDEDNSP: $9.5 B NEEDED DOMESTIC SHARE GAP REQUIRING EXTERNAL SUPPORT DOMESTIC SHARE GAP REQUIRING EXTERNAL SUPPORT 1. GROWTH$2 B27%$5.421%$7.5 2. ABUJA$3 B41%$4.432%$6.5 3. DALY$4.4 B59%$3.046%$5.1 4. MAX (2+3)$5.2 B70%$2.255%$4.3

14 Share of AIDS program cost covered with ‘maximum domestic effort’ (Abuja + DALY Share) Biggest relative increase

15 Main findings 1.Room for domestic AIDS spending to double or triple in medium term, but need for donor support will remain 2.Major work needed to strengthen financial information RESOURCE NEEDS ESTIMATION ROUTINE EXPENDITURE TRACKING 3.More work needed to explain variation between countries in resource estimates and AIDS spending per person living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA)

16 THANK YOU Stephen Resch stephen_resch@harvard.edu Center for Health Decision Science Harvard School of Public Health Robert Hecht rhecht@resultsfordevelopment.org Results for Development Institute and the R4D Team: Richard Skolnik, Toby Kasper, Theresa Ryckman, Gabrielle Partridge, Kira Thorien


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