Witter Sophie, Palmer Natasha, Jouhaud Rosemary, Zaidi Shehla, Carillon Severine, English Rene, Loffreda Giulia, Venables Emilie, Habib Shifa Salman, Tan Jeff, Hane Fatouma, Bertone Maria Paola, Hosseinalipour Seyed-Moeen, Ridde Valery, Shoaib Asad, Faye Adama, Dudley Lilian, Daniels Karen, Blanchet Karl
Institute for Global Health and Development, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Geneva Centre of Humanitarian Studies, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Global Health. 2025 Jul 9;21(1):40. doi: 10.1186/s12992-025-01129-0.
Since 2000, the number and role of global health initiatives (GHIs) has been growing, with these platforms playing an increasingly important role in pooling and disbursing funds dedicated to specific global health priorities. While recognising their important contribution, there has also been a growth in concerns about distortions and inefficiencies linked to the GHIs and attempts to improve their alignment with country health systems. There is a growing momentum to adjust GHIs to the current broader range of global health threats, such as non-communicable diseases, humanitarian crises and climate change, and against the backdrop of the recent aid cuts. However, reform attempts are challenged by the political economy of the current structures.
In this article, we draw on research conducted as part of the Future of Global Health Initiatives process. The study adopted a cross-sectional, mixed-methods approach, drawing from a range of data sources and data collection methods, including a global and regional level analysis as well as three embedded country case studies in Pakistan, South Africa and Senegal. All data was collected from February to July 2023. 271 documents were analysed in the course of the study, along with data from 335 key informants and meeting participants in 66 countries and across a range of constituencies. For this paper, data were analysed using a political economy framework which focused on actors, context (especially governance and financing) and framing.
In relation to actors, the GHIs themselves have become increasingly complex (both internally and in their interrelations with other global health actors and one another). They have a large range of clients (including at national level and amongst multilateral agencies) which function as collaborators as well as competitors. Historically there have been few incentives for any of the actors to maximise collaboration given the competitive funding landscape. Power to exert pressure for reforms sits ultimately with bilateral and private funders, though single-issue northern non-governmental organisations (NGOs) are also cited as important influencers. Funders have not collaborated to enable reforms, despite concerns amongst a number of them, because of the helpful functional role of GHIs, which serves funder interests. Some key global boards are reported to be engineered for stasis, and there are widespread concerns about lack of transparency and over-claiming (by some GHIs) of their results. Framing of narratives about achievements and challenges is important to enable or block reforms and are vigorously contested, with stakeholders often selecting different outcomes to emphasise in justifying positions.
GHIs have played an important role in the global health ecosystem but despite formal accountability structures to include recipient governments, substantive accountability has been focused upwards to funders, with risk management strategies which prioritise tracking resources more than improved national health system performance. Achieving consensus on reforms will be challenging but current funding pressures and new threats are creating a sense of urgency, which may shift positions. Political economy analysis can model and influence these debates.
自2000年以来,全球卫生倡议(GHI)的数量和作用不断增加,这些平台在汇集和分配专门用于特定全球卫生优先事项的资金方面发挥着越来越重要的作用。在认识到其重要贡献的同时,人们也越来越担心与全球卫生倡议相关的扭曲和低效率问题,并试图使其与国家卫生系统更好地协调一致。在当前援助削减的背景下,调整全球卫生倡议以应对当前更广泛的全球卫生威胁,如非传染性疾病、人道主义危机和气候变化,这一势头日益增强。然而,改革尝试受到当前结构的政治经济因素的挑战。
在本文中,我们借鉴了作为全球卫生倡议未来进程一部分开展的研究。该研究采用了横断面混合方法,从一系列数据源和数据收集方法中获取信息,包括全球和区域层面的分析以及在巴基斯坦、南非和塞内加尔进行的三个嵌入式国家案例研究。所有数据均在2023年2月至7月期间收集。在研究过程中,共分析了271份文件,以及来自66个国家和一系列选区的335名关键信息提供者和会议参与者的数据。对于本文,使用了一个政治经济框架来分析数据,该框架侧重于行为体、背景(特别是治理和融资)以及框架构建。
关于行为体,全球卫生倡议本身变得越来越复杂(在其内部以及与其他全球卫生行为体及其相互之间的关系方面)。它们有广泛的客户(包括国家层面和多边机构中的客户),这些客户既是合作伙伴又是竞争对手。鉴于竞争激烈的资金环境,历史上几乎没有任何行为体有动力最大限度地开展合作。施加改革压力的权力最终掌握在双边和私人资助者手中,不过单一议题的北方非政府组织也被认为是重要的影响者。尽管一些资助者对此表示担忧,但由于全球卫生倡议发挥的有益功能作用符合资助者的利益,他们并未合作推动改革。据报道,一些关键的全球委员会旨在维持现状,人们普遍担心缺乏透明度以及一些全球卫生倡议对其成果的过度宣称。关于成就和挑战的叙述框架对于推动或阻碍改革很重要,并且存在激烈争议,利益相关者在为自身立场辩护时往往会选择强调不同的结果。
全球卫生倡议在全球卫生生态系统中发挥了重要作用,但尽管有包括受援国政府在内的正式问责结构,实际问责主要是针对资助者,风险管理策略更侧重于跟踪资源而非改善国家卫生系统的绩效。就改革达成共识将具有挑战性,但当前的资金压力和新威胁正在营造一种紧迫感,这可能会改变各方立场。政治经济分析可以为这些辩论提供模型并施加影响。