A New Compact for Health Financing: From Principle to Practice
Tom Drake,
Anastassia Demeshko,
Mizan Mirutse,
Solomon Memirie,
Ole Norheim,
Miloud Kaddar,
Kalipso Chalkidou,
Pete Baker and
Nadia Yakhelef
Additional contact information
Tom Drake: Center for Global Development
Anastassia Demeshko: Center for Global Development
Mizan Mirutse: Bergen Center for Ethics and Priority Setting in Health, University of Bergen
Solomon Memirie: Addis Center for Ethics and Priority Setting, Addis Ababa University
Ole Norheim: Bergen Center for Ethics and Priority Setting in Health, University of Bergen
Miloud Kaddar: Independent consultant
Kalipso Chalkidou: School of Public Health, Imperial College London
Pete Baker: Center for Global Development
Nadia Yakhelef: Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention
No 386, Policy Papers from Center for Global Development
Abstract:
Global health financing is undergoing significant strain following the 2025 aid shocks, including the USAID shutdown and major reductions across European donors. The resulting decline in development assistance for health has disrupted services and amplified long-standing concerns around fragmentation, aid dependency, and weak alignment with national systems. This moment has renewed calls for reform in how health services are financed and coordinated. Centred on evidence-informed priority setting, domestic-first financing of core services, and consolidated supplementary aid, the New Compact offers a framework to guide health financing reform. This paper examines how the New Compact for health financing can be taken from principle to practice, both as a strategic guide for global reform and as a technical framework at the country-level. We analyse implications under three scenarios for global health architecture reform: maintaining the status quo; donor policy shifts but no architectural reform; and a consolidated multilateral financing mechanism. We draw on lessons from past global and country-level coordination efforts and assess opportunities for donor policy shifts to operationalise reforms aligned with a New Compact approach. A framework for country-level drivers for success is developed to guide transition plans. Taken together with ideas for action for donors and recipient countries, this paper positions the New Compact as an approach for strengthening country ownership, improving allocation efficiency, and building more resilient health financing systems amid fiscal uncertainty.
Pages: 58 pages
Date: 2026-03-31
References: Add references at CitEc
Citations:
Downloads: (external link)
https://www.cgdev.org/publication/new-compact-heal ... l&utm_campaign=repec
Related works:
This item may be available elsewhere in EconPapers: Search for items with the same title.
Export reference: BibTeX
RIS (EndNote, ProCite, RefMan)
HTML/Text
Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cgd:ppaper:386
Access Statistics for this paper
More papers in Policy Papers from Center for Global Development Contact information at EDIRC.
Bibliographic data for series maintained by Publications Manager ().