ADB President Strengthens Collaboration with UK DFID on its Response to COVID-19

News Release | 26 March 2020
Read time: 2 mins

SHARE THIS PAGE

MANILA, PHILIPPINES (26 March 2020) — Asian Development Bank (ADB) President Masatsugu Asakawa and the Department for International Development (DFID) of the United Kingdom (UK) Secretary of State Anne-Marie Trevelyan agreed today to further strengthen their collaboration in combating the global threat posed by the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

In a call with Ms. Trevelyan, Mr. Asakawa provided an update on ADB’s operational response to COVID-19 and future plans.

Mr. Asakawa said, “while these are unprecedented times for the entire world, by working together in close coordination and collaboration, we will be able to get the situation under control sooner and to respond to the urgent needs of developing member countries in Asia and the Pacific.”

Mr. Asakawa requested UK support as ADB proceeds with planned adjustments to existing policies to respond effectively and quickly to the crisis. He also assured that ADB is working in close coordination with its membership and other international organizations.

On 18 March, ADB announced an initial package of about $6.5 billion to address the immediate needs of its developing member countries as they respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. ADB stands ready to provide further financial assistance and policy advice down the road whenever the situation warrants. Visit ADB’s website to learn more about our ongoing response.

ADB is committed to achieving a prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable Asia and the Pacific, while sustaining its efforts to eradicate extreme poverty. Established in 1966, it is owned by 68 members—49 from the region. 

Media Contact

Latest News

  • ADB Signs $44.2 Million Blue Loan with ALBA to Reduce Ocean Plastic Waste in Indonesia
    News from Country Offices | 06 June 2023
    ADB Signs $44.2 Million Blue Loan with ALBA to Reduce Ocean Plastic Waste in Indonesia

    JAKARTA, INDONESIA (6 June 2023) — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) signed a $44.2 million blue loan with PT ALBA Tridi Plastics Recycling Indonesia, an ALBA Group Asia company, to establish a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) recycling facility in Central Java.

    ADB and the Leading Asia's Private Infrastructure Fund (LEAP) will each provide $22.1 million in funding for the project. Blue loans are financing instruments that aim to safeguard access to clean water, protect underwater environments, and invest in a sustainable water economy.

  • ADB Records $11.4 Billion in Cofinancing, Focused on Resilience Against Economic Shocks
    News Releases, News Release | 05 June 2023
    ADB Records $11.4 Billion in Cofinancing, Focused on Resilience Against Economic Shocks The financing partners of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) committed $11.4 billion in cofinancing of ADB projects in 2022 to help build the resilience of developing member countries and enable them to withstand economic shocks, according to the Partnership Report 2022: Driving Growth, Boosting Resilience.
  • ADB Helps Launch Vocational Education Project in PNG
    News from Country Offices | 01 June 2023
    ADB Helps Launch Vocational Education Project in PNG ADB and the governments of Australia and Papua New Guinea today launched a cofinanced project to improve the country’s technical and vocational education and training program.
  • ADB to Focus on Robust, Climate-Resilient, and Inclusive Growth in India
    News Releases, News from Country Offices | 30 May 2023
    ADB to Focus on Robust, Climate-Resilient, and Inclusive Growth in India ADB has launched a new country partnership strategy for India with a focus on deepening its engagement with the country and supporting India’s drive for robust, climate-resilient, and inclusive growth.

ADB Approves CNY130 Million Private Sector Loan to Support Coronavirus Response in PRC

  • Jointown Vice Chairman Liu Zhaonian (left) and Advisor for ADB's Private Sector Operations Department Hisaka Kimura (right) during the signing on 25 February 2020 in Beijing.

News Release | 25 February 2020
Read time: 1 min

SHARE THIS PAGE

MANILA, PHILIPPINES (25 February 2020) — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) today signed an agreement for a private sector loan of up to CNY130 million ($18.6 million) to Jointown Pharmaceutical Group Co. Ltd. (Jointown) in the People’s Republic of China (PRC).

The local currency loan will support Jointown’s efforts to ensure a continued supply of essential medicines and personal protective equipment such as protective clothing, gloves, goggles, face masks, and respirators. The financing will also support Jointown’s cooperation with the Red Cross in its efforts to respond to the spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19). Jointown is the largest private pharmaceutical distributor in the PRC and is headquartered in Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province and the epicenter of the COVID-19 outbreak.

“We are very grateful to ADB for its timely support for Jointown at the frontline of the fight against the COVID-19 epidemic,” said the Vice Chairman of Jointown Liu Zhaonian. “With ADB’s facility, we will further deliver drugs and urgently needed personal protective equipment to the most severely affected areas.”

“This financing will help Jointown to maintain adequate stock of urgently needed medical supplies, antiviral drugs, and personal protective equipment for distribution to hospitals and retail pharmacy outlets,” said the Director General of ADB’s Private Sector Operations Department Mike Barrow. “By focusing support at the center of the outbreak, the assistance will make a meaningful contribution to Jointown’s crucial role in containing the spread.”

Jointown has been designated by the Hubei provincial government to procure and distribute drugs and medical supplies during the COVID-19 outbreak. Its distribution warehouse in Wuhan is the largest such facility in the PRC. Advanced information technology systems help Jointown to maintain efficiencies and service standards even as the spread of the virus significantly increases the demand for medical supplies. Given its experience in warehouse and inventory management, Jointown has been asked to assist the Wuhan and Hubei provincial branches of the Red Cross Society of China in classifying, storing, and managing inventory of donated products.

The financing is ADB’s first private sector assistance to support health security and was expedited under a streamlined approval process for small nonsovereign transactions. The two-year loan will complement loans already provided to Jointown by PRC financial institutions. It is part of ADB’s broader response to the COVID-19 outbreak, which was initiated on 7 February with $2 million in funding to strengthen response capacity in several countries in Asia and the Pacific.

ADB is committed to achieving a prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable Asia and the Pacific, while sustaining its efforts to eradicate extreme poverty. Established in 1966, it is owned by 68 members—49 from the region.

Media Contact

Latest News

  • ADB Signs $44.2 Million Blue Loan with ALBA to Reduce Ocean Plastic Waste in Indonesia
    News from Country Offices | 06 June 2023
    ADB Signs $44.2 Million Blue Loan with ALBA to Reduce Ocean Plastic Waste in Indonesia

    JAKARTA, INDONESIA (6 June 2023) — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) signed a $44.2 million blue loan with PT ALBA Tridi Plastics Recycling Indonesia, an ALBA Group Asia company, to establish a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) recycling facility in Central Java.

    ADB and the Leading Asia's Private Infrastructure Fund (LEAP) will each provide $22.1 million in funding for the project. Blue loans are financing instruments that aim to safeguard access to clean water, protect underwater environments, and invest in a sustainable water economy.

  • ADB Records $11.4 Billion in Cofinancing, Focused on Resilience Against Economic Shocks
    News Releases, News Release | 05 June 2023
    ADB Records $11.4 Billion in Cofinancing, Focused on Resilience Against Economic Shocks The financing partners of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) committed $11.4 billion in cofinancing of ADB projects in 2022 to help build the resilience of developing member countries and enable them to withstand economic shocks, according to the Partnership Report 2022: Driving Growth, Boosting Resilience.
  • ADB Helps Launch Vocational Education Project in PNG
    News from Country Offices | 01 June 2023
    ADB Helps Launch Vocational Education Project in PNG ADB and the governments of Australia and Papua New Guinea today launched a cofinanced project to improve the country’s technical and vocational education and training program.
  • ADB to Focus on Robust, Climate-Resilient, and Inclusive Growth in India
    News Releases, News from Country Offices | 30 May 2023
    ADB to Focus on Robust, Climate-Resilient, and Inclusive Growth in India ADB has launched a new country partnership strategy for India with a focus on deepening its engagement with the country and supporting India’s drive for robust, climate-resilient, and inclusive growth.

ADBが中国における新型コロナウイルス 対応を支援するために1億3千万人民元の 民間部門向け融資を承認

  • 刘兆年(Liu Zhaonian)ジョインタウン副会長(左)と木村寿香ADB民間部門業務局アドバイザー(2020年2月25日の北京での融資契約調印式にて)

News Release | 25 February 2020
Read time: 1 min

SHARE THIS PAGE

フィリピン・マニラ(2020年2月25日)-アジア開発銀行(ADB)は本日、中国においてジョインタウン・ファーマスーティカル・ グループ(九州通医薬集団股分有限公司)への1億3千万人民元(1,860万ドル)を上限とする民間部門融資契約に調印した。

この現地通貨建て融資により、必要な医薬品や防護服、手袋、ゴーグル、フェイスマスク、防護マスクなどの個人用防護具を継続的に供給するためのジョインタウンの取り組みを支援する。この融資はまた、新型コロナウイルス(COVID-19)の感染拡大に対応する赤十字の取り組みへのジョインタウンによる協力を支援する。ジョインタウンは中国最大の民間医薬品卸売業者で、湖北省の首都で新型コロナウイルスの感染源となった武漢市に本社を置く。

ジョインタウン副会長の刘兆年(Liu Zhaonian)氏は、「新型コロナウイルス感染拡大への対応の最前線にいる我々ジョインタウンへのADBによる時宜を得た支援に感謝したい」とした上で、「ADBの支援を得て、我々は最も深刻な影響を受けている地域に、医薬品や緊急に必要とされる個人用防護具を届けることができる」と述べた。

ADB民間部門業務局のマイケル・バロー局長は、「この融資により、ジョインタウンが病院や小売薬局に支給するために十分な医療品や抗ウイルス薬、そして個人防護具を確保することを支援する」と述べ、「アウトブレイクの中心地の支援に焦点を絞ることにより、感染拡大を食い止める上でのジョインタウンの重要な役割に意義のある貢献を果たす」と語った。

ジョインタウンは、新型コロナウイルスの感染拡大に際して、湖北省政府の要請により医薬・医療品の調達と供給にあたっている。武漢市にあるジョインタウンの物流倉庫は、そうした施設としては中国最大である。先端のITシステムを備えており、新型ウイルスの感染拡大により医療品のニーズが大幅に増加したとしても、ジョインタウンがその効率性やサービス水準を維持することが可能である。物流倉庫や在庫管理分野での経験により、ジョインタウンは武漢市および湖北省の中国赤十字会より、支援物資の分類、保管、管理についての支援を要請された。

この融資は、保健医療の安全保障をサポートするADB初の民間部門支援であり、少額のノンソブリン支援向けの簡素化された案件承認プロセスにより、速やかに承認された。2年間にわたるこの融資は、中国の金融機関によりジョインタウンに対してすでに供与されている融資を補完することとなる。これは新型コロナウイルスの感染拡大に対応するADBの幅広い取り組みの一部であり、アジア・太平洋地域の数か国における対応能力の強化を目的として、2月7日に承認した200万ドルの資金援助に続くものである。

Media Contact

Latest News

  • ADB Signs $44.2 Million Blue Loan with ALBA to Reduce Ocean Plastic Waste in Indonesia
    News from Country Offices | 06 June 2023
    ADB Signs $44.2 Million Blue Loan with ALBA to Reduce Ocean Plastic Waste in Indonesia

    JAKARTA, INDONESIA (6 June 2023) — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) signed a $44.2 million blue loan with PT ALBA Tridi Plastics Recycling Indonesia, an ALBA Group Asia company, to establish a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) recycling facility in Central Java.

    ADB and the Leading Asia's Private Infrastructure Fund (LEAP) will each provide $22.1 million in funding for the project. Blue loans are financing instruments that aim to safeguard access to clean water, protect underwater environments, and invest in a sustainable water economy.

  • ADB Records $11.4 Billion in Cofinancing, Focused on Resilience Against Economic Shocks
    News Releases, News Release | 05 June 2023
    ADB Records $11.4 Billion in Cofinancing, Focused on Resilience Against Economic Shocks The financing partners of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) committed $11.4 billion in cofinancing of ADB projects in 2022 to help build the resilience of developing member countries and enable them to withstand economic shocks, according to the Partnership Report 2022: Driving Growth, Boosting Resilience.
  • ADB Helps Launch Vocational Education Project in PNG
    News from Country Offices | 01 June 2023
    ADB Helps Launch Vocational Education Project in PNG ADB and the governments of Australia and Papua New Guinea today launched a cofinanced project to improve the country’s technical and vocational education and training program.
  • ADB to Focus on Robust, Climate-Resilient, and Inclusive Growth in India
    News Releases, News from Country Offices | 30 May 2023
    ADB to Focus on Robust, Climate-Resilient, and Inclusive Growth in India ADB has launched a new country partnership strategy for India with a focus on deepening its engagement with the country and supporting India’s drive for robust, climate-resilient, and inclusive growth.

亚行批准1.3亿元人民币私营部门贷款,支持中国抗击新型冠状病毒

  • 2020年2月25日于北京,九州通副董事长刘兆年(左)和亚行私营部门业务局顾问木村寿香(右)在签约仪式上。

News Release | 25 February 2020
Read time: 1 min

SHARE THIS PAGE

菲律宾马尼拉(2020年2月25日讯)— 为帮助中华人民共和国(中国)抗击新型冠状病毒(COVID-19)的蔓延,亚洲开发银行(亚行)今日签署了一项与九州通医药集团股份有限公司(九州通)的私营部门贷款协议,向其提供采购和配送药品等医疗物资所需的短期资金,金额高达1.3亿元人民币(等值1,860万美元)。 

该笔本币贷款将支援九州通保障基本药物和防护服、手套、护目镜、口罩、呼吸器等个人防护设备的持续供应。九州通是中国最大的民营医药流通企业,总部位于湖北省省会武汉市,即此次疫情暴发的中心。

九州通副董事长刘兆年表示:“非常感谢亚行在中国人民抗击新冠肺炎的特殊时期给予奋战在抗击疫情第一线的九州通提供所需的支持,亚行提供的资金真的是雪中送炭,非常及时。九州通会将这笔贷款资金用于采购和配送疫情最严重地区所急需的医疗防护物资和药品。”

亚行私营部门业务局局长迈克尔·巴罗(Mike Barrow)表示:“亚行融资将帮助九州通储备足够的急需医疗物资、抗病毒药物和个人防护设备,并配送给各大医院和零售药店。援助将重点支持疫情暴发的中心,有力促进九州通在阻击疫情中发挥关键作用。”

九州通是抗击疫情期间湖北省政府指定的医药配送企业之一,负责采购和配送药品等医疗物资,其武汉仓库的规模在中国首屈一指。即使在病毒肆虐、医疗用品需求激增的情况下,九州通仍能借助先进的信息技术系统高效运转,并保持高服务标准。鉴于其丰富的仓储和库存管理经验,九州通受命协助武汉市红十字会及湖北省红十字会对捐赠品进行分类、储存和库存管理。

这是亚行私营部门首次为保障健康安全提供援助,亚行采用小额非主权业务快速审批流程,加速通过了该笔贷款融资。贷款为期两年,是对中国金融机构已向九州通提供贷款的补充,也是亚行对新型冠状病毒疫情的响应援助之一。此前,亚行于2月7日启动了新型冠状病毒响应援助,出资200万美元,增强亚洲和太平洋地区多个国家的应对能力。

亚行在坚持消除极端贫困的同时,致力于实现繁荣、包容、有适应力和可持续的亚太地区。亚行成立于1966年,现有68个成员,其中49个来自亚太地区。

Media Contact

Latest News

  • ADB Signs $44.2 Million Blue Loan with ALBA to Reduce Ocean Plastic Waste in Indonesia
    News from Country Offices | 06 June 2023
    ADB Signs $44.2 Million Blue Loan with ALBA to Reduce Ocean Plastic Waste in Indonesia

    JAKARTA, INDONESIA (6 June 2023) — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) signed a $44.2 million blue loan with PT ALBA Tridi Plastics Recycling Indonesia, an ALBA Group Asia company, to establish a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) recycling facility in Central Java.

    ADB and the Leading Asia's Private Infrastructure Fund (LEAP) will each provide $22.1 million in funding for the project. Blue loans are financing instruments that aim to safeguard access to clean water, protect underwater environments, and invest in a sustainable water economy.

  • ADB Records $11.4 Billion in Cofinancing, Focused on Resilience Against Economic Shocks
    News Releases, News Release | 05 June 2023
    ADB Records $11.4 Billion in Cofinancing, Focused on Resilience Against Economic Shocks The financing partners of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) committed $11.4 billion in cofinancing of ADB projects in 2022 to help build the resilience of developing member countries and enable them to withstand economic shocks, according to the Partnership Report 2022: Driving Growth, Boosting Resilience.
  • ADB Helps Launch Vocational Education Project in PNG
    News from Country Offices | 01 June 2023
    ADB Helps Launch Vocational Education Project in PNG ADB and the governments of Australia and Papua New Guinea today launched a cofinanced project to improve the country’s technical and vocational education and training program.
  • ADB to Focus on Robust, Climate-Resilient, and Inclusive Growth in India
    News Releases, News from Country Offices | 30 May 2023
    ADB to Focus on Robust, Climate-Resilient, and Inclusive Growth in India ADB has launched a new country partnership strategy for India with a focus on deepening its engagement with the country and supporting India’s drive for robust, climate-resilient, and inclusive growth.

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Health Sector Review: Hospital Care

This publication presents a detailed review and assessment of the governance, infrastructure, and financing aspects of hospital care in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province.

Overcoming Public Sector Inefficiencies toward Universal Health Coverage: The Case for National Health Insurance Systems in Asia and the Pacific

This publication discusses how countries in Asia and the Pacific can overcome public sector inefficiencies in the health system and how governments can obtain better outcomes on their journey towards universal health coverage.

Strengthened Collaboration between ADB and the Global Fund Contributing to the Health Financing Agenda in Asia and in the Pacific

Description

The planned event “How can the strengthened collaboration between ADB and the Global Fund contribute to the health financing agenda in Asia and in the Pacific?” will discuss financing for communicable diseases and health in Asia-Pacific and solicit input and recommendations from countries to ADB and the Global Fund. This event will be organized during Malaria Week being hosted by the Ministry of Health and Sports (MoHS), Myanmar in partnership with WHO, UNOPS, and APLMA from 4-8 December 2017 in Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar.

ADB and the Global Fund are planning a strategic partnership to expand health financing in the region. This collaboration may involve improved coordination; co-financing of health programs; results-based financing; and buy-downs (using grant financing to reduce the cost of loan financing for health). Expectedly, the partnership will allow for an expansion of health financing in Asia-Pacific.

In the coming years, financing partners like the Global Fund will increasingly focus on sustainability, transition, and co-financing (STC). The Global Fund’s new STC policy emphasizes “long-term sustainability as a key aspect of health financing, and that all countries, regardless of their economic capacity and disease burden, should embed sustainability considerations within national strategies, program design and implementation”. There are many challenges related to programmatic and financial sustainability of externally financed health programs. Increased domestic resource allocation for health does not automatically translate into equal access to health and healthcare, especially for key and vulnerable populations. Planning for sustainability takes time, and requires investing in resilient health systems; planning and service delivery, including the ability to absorb new financial resources; and capacity development.

Objectives

The main objectives of this session are to present how the emerging collaboration between ADB and GF may lead to increased health financing, and to solicit guidance from countries on how such collaboration can best support country-specific needs.

Target participants

Senior officials from ministries of health and ministries of finance from the 21 malaria-endemic countries of Asia Pacific will be invited to this meeting. The nominees from each country will attend the health financing meeting as well the Senior Official Meeting the following day. Key organizations from the public health and health financing fields will also be invited. The list includes: World Health Organization (WHO), World Bank, United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS), Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), UNITAID, the UK Department for International Development (DFID), the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) and the US President Malaria Initiative. ADB, the Global Fund and the Asia Pacific Leaders Malaria Alliance (APLMA) will be attending as meeting organizers.

How to register

By invitation only

Costs

While attendance to the event is free, ADB does not cover travel and accommodation expenses of participants.

Event organizer

ADB is the co-organizer of this event, which is a part of Malaria Week 2017.

Regional Malaria and other Communicable Diseases Threats Trust Fund: Best Practices Workshop

Description

The Ministry of Health and Sports (MoHS), Myanmar in partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS), and Asia Pacific Leaders Malaria Alliance (APLMA) is hosting Malaria Week from 4-8 December 2017 in Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar. The week will help build momentum for the region in spearheading malaria elimination efforts by convening high-level government officials to work together for elimination of malaria from Asia and the Pacific by 2030. Malaria Week involves a range of partners convening different meetings throughout the week.

ADB will host the workshop on 4 December under the Regional Malaria and other Communicable Diseases Threats Trust Fund (RMTF) to help sustain the momentum in the region in supporting the Leaders’ goal of eliminating malaria by 2030, and to highlight the urgency of this task. The RMTF is a multi-donor trust fund established in 2013, under the ADB Health Financing Partnership Facility. It aims to support developing member countries (DMCs), especially those in the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) to develop regional, multi country, cross-border and multisector responses to drug–resistant malaria and other communicable disease issues. The trust fund adopts a health systems strengthening approach to addressing malaria control and regional health security.

Objectives

  • To share the achievements under the RMTF in supporting health system strengthening efforts in the GMS.
  • To highlight best practices and innovative solutions for malaria developed under RMTF, in line with the WHO Global Technical Strategy and WHO Strategy for Malaria Elimination in the GMS.
  • To provide a platform for engagement on best practices, innovative solutions and capacity development mechanisms to be applied beyond the GMS countries.
  • To focus on capacity development mechanisms, which address root causes of drug resistant malaria and communicable disease, and which are sustainable beyond the implementation period of the trust fund.

Target participants

ADB is organizing the meeting and the audience will be the Asia Pacific Malaria Elimination Network (APMEN) which consists of National Malaria Program Managers, APMEN partner institutions, researchers and academics from across the Asia Pacific Region. In addition, key technical organizations and donors from the public health fields will also be invited.

How to register

By invitation only.

Costs

While attendance to the event is free, ADB does not cover travel and accommodation expenses of participants.

Event organizer

ADB is the organizer of this event, which is a part of Malaria Week 2017.

More money alone won't meet SDG 3 - Susann Roth

  • Health spending in most countries in developing Asia is below the OECD average and WHO recommendations.

Op-Ed / Opinion | 17 July 2017
Read time: 5 mins

SHARE THIS PAGE

Over 20 years ago, during my second year at medical school, I spent my semester break with an Indian nongovernmental organization providing health services to the urban poor in Kolkata. I soon realized that being a doctor or a nurse accomplishes little if there isn’t enough money to pay for diagnostic tests or medicine.

Later, during some fieldwork in a province in the Philippines when I was working on my master’s degree in public health, I learned that even when funding is available, it does not necessarily result in better health outcomes.

Health care, I now know, is essentially a business, and as such needs proper funding mechanisms to deliver quality service.

When we think about financing strategies to meet the third Sustainable Development Goal—to ensure health and wellbeing for everyone—the first question that comes to mind is, how much will it cost? Probably hundreds of billions of dollars are needed. Health will account for the lion’s share of the $1.3 trillion that developing Asia is expected to spend on social infrastructure by 2025. And health infrastructure alone is not enough. We will also need to invest in health professionals’ capacity development, as well as in health service delivery.

New ways to access new money

Economic growth should allow for more government spending on health. But that’s also not enough. Most countries in developing Asia spend far less on health than the OECD average and below what the World Health Organization recommends. Investing in health is still not perceived as cost-efficient to obtain financial returns in the short to medium term.

On the positive side, most countries in the region are slowly increasing public health expenditure and are committed to providing universal health coverage. Some countries are scaling up social health insurance and others are exploring how to extend existing financial market instruments such as bonds to the health sector.

As traditional donor grants are harder to come by, it’s time to find new ways to access money. Bonds and blended finance can help, and engaging the private sector will be critical.

Bonds can support large-scale health and social infrastructure investment. Earlier this year, ADB became the first multilateral development bank to launch a health bond, targeting investors keen to contribute to a social cause that can deliver good long-term returns.

Another option is to leverage more blended financing. As more countries graduate from eligibility for concessional financing, blended finance can help make even the most expensive loans more accessible.

Blended finance can entail partnering with donors and negotiating grants beyond country allocations, linked to sector development or policy loans, basically structuring grants around loan policy conditions. This would allow existing non-government health providers to be funded through grants, which is crucial in countries where social contracting with civil society and the private sector is still difficult. Without access to grant financing, governments may be inclined to only finance physical health infrastructure such as hospitals and not the training and reforms that will make UHC possible.

Blended finance can come from foundations or the private sector itself. The key here is to structure the project so that countries get the most “bang from their buck” from investments; grants target “soft” sectors such as capacity development, while loans are used more for “hard” targets such as infrastructure or procurement.

Public-private collaboration is win-win

Beyond bonds and blended finance, the third option to increase health funding in developing Asia is to work with the private sector. While there has always been a heated debate about the value addition of the private sector in health, from my point of view it's the best way forward.

Public-private collaboration on health can bring huge benefits to both sides. For instance, pooled procurement of medicine and other health commodities allows the public sector to leverage economies of scale, so it can then negotiate better prices with the private sector and pay less for the same items. This is already happening with vaccines in countries that are graduating from top donor funds.

The public and private sectors can also work together on lease and maintenance arrangements for equipment. This reduces the initial investment burden on the public sector while ensuring longer contracts for private providers. A good example is a pilot program in remote areas of Myanmar to convert shipping containers into operating rooms equipped with solar panels and telecommunications systems.

The case for more private sector funding in health is clear. The challenge for governments is to create the necessary incentives to make it happen, especially in emerging markets.

One way forward is to identify gaps where the public sector can guarantee payments over the long term to serve low-income populations. A government can, for example, approach a company to set up renal care clinics by committing to pay for a minimum number of dialysis cycles per month. This reduces the risk for the firm entering a new market where most people lack basic insurance and, even if they have it, cannot afford additional chronic out-of-pocket treatment.

Governments can also set up schemes that enable companies to check that their business models are providing accessible, affordable and equitable health care. The private sector stands to benefit – once it overcomes the resistance to invest in low-income settings.

To move forward on health financing in developing Asia, we need solutions as well as money. Funds must be targeted to each country, align with national health plans and be followed by serious government efforts to attract the private sector. Only then can we aspire to attain universal health coverage.

Author

SHARE THIS PAGE

Latest Op-Eds / Opinions

Subscribe to Health finance