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The Cost-Effectiveness of Health Aid: An Exploratory Quantitative Analysis

Victoria Fan, Brian Webster, Venkatesh Subramanian, Karen Grépin, David Watkins and Joseph Dieleman
Additional contact information
Brian Webster: Center for Global Development
Karen Grépin: Hong Kong University
David Watkins: University of Washington
Joseph Dieleman: University of Washington

No 700, Working Papers from Center for Global Development

Abstract: One approach to development assistance for health, or health aid, emphasizes the ex ante selection of cost-effective health interventions, an approach that began with the World Development Report (1993) on Investing in Health and has since been adopted by the Effective Altruism community. But just how much of health aid is cost-effective? In this paper, we examine projects in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Creditor Reporting System, the standard dataset that measures and characterizes development assistance for health, for the years 2019 to 2021, and count the number of projects that refer to interventions from a list of highly cost-effective interventions as defined by the Disease Control Priorities Project, third edition. This exploratory quantitative analysis indicates that 61% of projects used a key word/phrase of a cost-effective intervention. There were 11.9 interventions mapped per project on average. There is little evidence that donors tailor the set of interventions to country income levels by cost-effectiveness. Policymakers may benefit from reviewing the full portfolio of interventions covered by domestic and external resources.

Pages: 24 pages
Date: 2024-08-26
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-hea and nep-ppm
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