Has HIV/AIDS displaced other health funding priorities? Evidence from a new dataset of development aid for health
Grace Lordan,
Kam Ki Tang and
Fabrizio Carmignani ()
Social Science & Medicine, 2011, vol. 73, issue 3, 351-355
Abstract:
In recent times there has been a sense that HIV/AIDS control has been attracting a significantly larger portion of donor health funding to the extent that it crowds out funding for other health concerns. Although there is no doubt that HIV/AIDS has absorbed a large share of development assistance for health (DAH), whether HIV/AIDS is actually diverting funding away from other health concerns has yet to be analyzed fully. To fill this vacuum, this study aims to test if a higher level of HIV/AIDS funding is related to a displacement in funding for other health concerns, and if yes, to quantify the magnitude of the displacement effect. Specifically, we consider whether HIV/AIDS DAH has displaced i) TB, ii) malaria iii) health sector and 'other' DAH in terms of the dollar amount received for aid. We consider this question within a regression framework controlling for time and recipient heterogeneity. We find displacement effects for malaria and health sector funding but not TB. In particular, the displacement effect for malaria is large and worrying.
Keywords: Malaria; funding; Health; sector; funding; Development; assistance; for; health; Funding; displacement; HIV; funding; AIDS; funding; Tuberculosis; funding; TB; funding (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011
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