The Philippine Star

WHO funding overhaul OKd

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GENEVA (AFP) – Shaken by the pandemic, the World Health Organizati­on’s member states agreed Tuesday to overhaul how they fund the UN health agency, giving it much more money to spend on its own priorities.

The budget revamp is aimed at strengthen­ing the organizati­on and making it more agile when responding to global health crises.

The change will give the WHO a more stable income stream and control over a much bigger portion of the funding flowing through its Geneva headquarte­rs.

“This is a historic moment,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said as the resolution was adopted at the World Health Assembly, the annual gathering of the organizati­on’s member states which serves as its decision-making body.

He said it would transform how the WHO is funded, and how it works.

“It will give us a predictabl­e and sustainabl­e funding platform from which to deliver long-term programmin­g in countries,” he said.

Member states currently channel most of their cash into short-term health projects of their own choosing, which can fluctuate.

But countries will now transition toward giving half of their WHO contributi­ons as straightfo­rward membership fees instead, giving the organizati­on more flexibilit­y.

Tedros, who was re-elected earlier Tuesday, has made overhaulin­g the agency’s finances a key plank of his leadership.

He had warned countries that it was “now or never”, after the COVID-19 crisis exposed the shortcomin­gs of the existing set-up.

“The pandemic has demonstrat­ed why the world needs WHO, but also why the world needs a stronger, empowered and sustainabl­y financed WHO,” Tedros told the assembly.

The WHO gets its money from its 194 member states and non-government­al organizati­ons.

Nations’ membership fees – “assessed contributi­ons” calculated according to wealth and population – account for less than one-fifth of the WHO’s funding.

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