How feasible is it to mobilize $31 billion a year for pandemic preparedness and response? An economic growth modelling analysis
Minahil Shahid, Marco Schäferhoff, Garrett Brown, Gavin Yamey

TL;DR
This paper assesses whether $31 billion annually can be mobilized for pandemic preparedness and response based on economic growth projections.
Contribution
The study introduces a growth-based model to evaluate the feasibility of meeting proposed funding targets for pandemic preparedness.
Findings
Low-income countries would need to allocate 37% of health spending to PPR under the constant scenario.
Donors would need to dedicate 8% of ODA to PPR annually to meet targets.
Alternative funding sources like global taxation or debt cancellation may be necessary.
Abstract
Covid-19 has reinforced health and economic cases for investing in pandemic preparedness and response (PPR). The World Bank and World Health Organization (WHO) propose that low- and middle-income governments and donor countries should invest $31.1 billion each year for PPR. We analyse, based on the projected economic growth of countries between 2022 and 2027, how likely it is that low- and middle-income country governments and donors can mobilize the estimated funding. We modelled trends in economic growth to project domestic health spending by low- and middle-income governments and official development assistance (ODA) by donors for years 2022 to 2027. We modelled two scenarios for countries and donors – a constant and an optimistic scenario. Under the constant scenario we assume that countries and donors continue to dedicate the same proportion of their health spending and ODA as a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Public Health Policies and Epidemiology · Healthcare Systems and Reforms · Global Health Care Issues
