Literature DB >> 20440979

The impact of the International Monetary Fund's macroeconomic policies on the AIDS pandemic.

Brook K Baker1.   

Abstract

Expansion of funding for HIV/AIDS, especially treatment, is under attack over concerns about cost effectiveness and financial constraints. The International Monetary Fund is deeply implicated in the history of the AIDS pandemic, the underlying weakness of health systems, and the ideology of constrained resources that underlies most attacks on AIDS funding. The IMF imposed structural violence on developing countries in the 1980s and 1990s through neoliberal and macroeconomic reforms that intensified individual and communal vulnerability to infection and dismantled already weak health systems. This same macroeconomic fundamentalism has recently been repackaged and renamed. IMF fundamentalist policies continue to prioritize low inflation, constricted government spending, robust foreign currency reserves, and prompt repayment of debt at the expense of investments in health and more expansionary, pro-growth and job-creation policies. Several recent surveys have concluded that the IMF reluctantly relaxed overly restrictive policy prescriptions in response to the global economic crisis, but this relaxation was temporary at best and only extended to countries previously acceding to IMF orthodoxy. AIDS activists are campaigning for billions of dollars to fulfill the promise of universal access. If IMF pressures persist, developing countries will continue to undermine the additionality of donor health financing by substituting donor for domestic financing, refusing to invest in recurrent costs for medicines and health workers, and neglecting needed investments in health infrastructure and health system strengthening.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20440979     DOI: 10.2190/HS.40.2.p

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Health Serv        ISSN: 0020-7314            Impact factor:   1.663


  2 in total

Review 1.  Harnessing the prevention benefits of antiretroviral therapy to address HIV and tuberculosis.

Authors:  Reuben Granich; Ying-Ru Lo; Amitabh B Suthar; Marco Vitoria; Rachel Baggaley; Carla Makhlouf Obermeyer; Craig McClure; Yves Souteyrand; Jos Perriens; James G Kahn; Rod Bennett; Caoimhe Smyth; Brian Williams; Julio Montaner; Gottfried Hirnschall
Journal:  Curr HIV Res       Date:  2011-09       Impact factor: 1.581

2.  Economic crisis, immigrant women and changing availability of intimate partner violence services: a qualitative study of professionals' perceptions in Spain.

Authors:  Erica Briones-Vozmediano; Andres A Agudelo-Suarez; Isabel Goicolea; Carmen Vives-Cases
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2014-09-10
  2 in total

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