| Literature DB >> 29233165 |
Ashley Warren1,2, Roberto Cordon3, Michaela Told4, Don de Savigny5,6, Ilona Kickbusch4, Marcel Tanner5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Global Fund is one of the largest actors in global health. In 2015 the Global Fund was credited with disbursing close to 10 % of all development assistance for health. In 2011 it began a reform process in response to internal reviews following allegations of recipients' misuse of funds. Reforms have focused on grant application processes thus far while the core structures and paradigm have remained intact. We report results of discussions with key stakeholders on the Global Fund, its paradigm of oversight, monitoring, and results in Mozambique.Entities:
Keywords: Coordination; Country oversight; Financial management; Global Fund; Mozambique; New funding model; Performance-based finance; Reform
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29233165 PMCID: PMC5728058 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-017-0308-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Fig. 1Comparison of the Rounds-based funding process and the New Funding Model [26]
Interviewees by representation
| Representation | Number of interviewees | Nomenclature in paper |
|---|---|---|
| Global Fund Board | 5 | GFBoardb |
| Global Fund Secretariat | 5 | GFSecretariatb |
| Global Fund Country Structurea | 4 | GFCountryStructureb |
| Academia | 1 | Academiab |
| Consultant Firm | 2 | Consultantb |
| Non-governmental organization | 3 | NGOb |
| Multilateral Agency | 6 | Multilateralb |
| OECD Partner | 10 | OECDPartnerb |
| Coordination Body | 2 | Coordinationb |
| Total | 38 |
Location of interviews: 11 of the GF and 4 of the OECD and Multilateral Agency interviews were conducted in Geneva. The remaining 23 interviews were conducted in Mozambique
aincludes Local Fund Agents, Country Coordinating Mechanism, Principal Recipients, and Sub-Recipients; members of the CCM may be a representative of a multilateral agency or OECD Partner (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development)
brefers to interviewees in chronological order
Summary of country-level perceptions of the Global Fund’s paradigm
| Aspect of paradigm | Perceived country-level result | Respondent(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Performance-based financing | • Recipients’ focus on disbursement rather than results | OECDPartner10 |
| • Burdensome administrative requirements | GFCountryStructure4 | |
| • Duplication of reporting efforts from the ground all the way to central level | Multilateral3 | |
| Emphasis on financial technicalities | • Staff with financial rather than development background who lack country experience | GFBoard4 |
| Lack of country office | • Other partners doing monitoring for the Global Fund | OECDPartner2 |
| • Global Fund is not engaged in country-level coordination | Coordination1, OECDPartner3 | |
| • Forces partners to coordinate among themselves more | Multilateral2 | |
| • Frequent deadlines and time stress | GFSecretariat5 | |
| • Over-worked staff, communication challenges, out-of-touch with realities on the ground | GFSecretariat5 | |
| • Dependent on expertise and interest of single person (Fund Portfolio Manager) | GFBoard4, GFCountryStructure1, GF Secretariat5 | |
| Partnerships | • Reliance on external consultants to develop proposals | Multilateral2 |
| • Early identification of gaps and provision of additional support | OECDPartner6 | |
| • Undefined roles and concerns about accountability | GFBoard2, GFCountryStructure4 | |
| • Potential for agenda alignment with single partner and less coordinated/multilateral approach | GFBoard1, GFCountryStructure2, GFSecretariat5, OECDPartners2, 3, and 10 |