| Literature DB >> 21532718 |
Nabyonga Orem Juliet1, Ssengooba Freddie, Sam Okuonzi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inadequate funding for health is a challenge to attaining health-related Millennium Development Goals. Significant increase in health funding was recommended by the Commission for Macroeconomics and Health. Indeed Official Development Assistance has increased significantly in Uganda. However, the effectiveness of donor aid has come under greater scrutiny. This paper scrutinizes the prerequisites for aid effectiveness. The objective of the study was to assess the prerequisites for effectiveness of donor aid, specifically, its proportion to overall health funding, predictability, comprehensiveness, alignment to country priorities, and channeling mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Donor ; Uganda ; aid for health ; effectiveness ; financing
Year: 2009 PMID: 21532718 PMCID: PMC2984282
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Definition of terms
| The extent to which donor aid projected to be acquired in the future is actually realized | |
| The extent to which donor aid finances the essential health package as a whole | |
| The proportion of donor aid in the government budget | |
| The proportion of donor aid outside the government budget | |
| The extent to which donor aid can be reallocated according to changing local needs | |
| The ability of the country to use available donor aid at its disposal | |
| Leading and steering of health policy and policy direction in the agreed interests of the country | |
| Harmonizing donor aid to address priority needs of the country as agreed in a national strategic plan or policy | |
| The extent to which the health and activities previously funded by donor aid can be maintained over medium and long periods with minimal external support |
Figure 1:
Donor expenditures in the health sector from 2004/05 to 2006/07
variances in donor project funding figures; budgets Vs expenditures; Million US$
| 2004/05 | 84.59 | 146.91 | 62.32 | 174% |
| 2005/06 | 147.06 | 277.95 | 130.89 | 189% |
| 2006/07 | 80.70 | 314.80 | 234.10 | 390% |
In 2003/04, there marked under spending on the Global Fund against AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, following suspension of the Project Management Unit. Source; GoU, MoH, Annual Health Sector Performance Report 2005, 2006, 2007. MTEF: Medium Term Expenditure Framework
Figure 2:
Percentage of donor projects and Global Health Initiatives not reflected in the Medium Term Expenditure Framework
Figure 3:
Expenditure of donor funds by inputs
HSSP: Health Sector Strategic Plan
Disease specific focus of donor funding; spending against expensive commodities in US$ per capita (% of total medicines expenditure)
| Essential medicines | 1.87 | 1.00 | 1.67 |
| Vertical and specialized (ACT’s, ARV’s, Pentavalent vaccine, ITNs) funded by donor aid | 1.24 (40%) | 3.00 (75%) | 2.3 (56%) |
ACT: Artemisin-based Combined Therapy, ARV’s: Antiretrovirals, ITNs: Insecticide treated nets
Has the Government of Uganda increased its allocation to health
| 4.8 | 10% | 5% | |
| 4.6 | 9% | 6% | |
| 5.0 | 10% | NA |
Source: computed from expenditure figures for Government of Uganda funding