DELEGATES APPROVE 16 PERCENT INCREASE TO WHO BUDGET
More than 90% of WHO’s funding is tied to specific health issues, and the agency often struggles to respond to urgent crises.
Member countries of the World Health Organisation have approved an “ambitious increase” in the budget for the U.N. health agency at a meeting, with some noting that WHO’s chronic underfunding cripples its ability to protect global health.
Delegates at the World Health Assembly on Thursday approved a 16% increase to WHO’s proposed budget for the next two years, setting it at about $6.1 billion.
More than 90% of WHO’s funding is tied to specific health issues, and the agency often struggles to respond to urgent crises.
Dr. Michael Ryan, WHO’s emergencies chief, said there is currently a 70% funding gap, which has “left the organisation in real and imminent danger of being unable to sustain core functions for urgent priorities.” A commissioned review of the WHO in the wake of its global handling of the COVID-19 pandemic suggested the agency could have acted faster and more aggressively to stem the spread of the coronavirus, but also said it lacked power and money.