UN Aid Programs Have Cost $22B Yet Little Proof They Work, Studies Say

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MARIA CHENG | 06/18/09 08:11 PM | AP

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LONDON — In the last two decades, the world has spent more than $196 billion trying to save people from death and disease in poor countries.

But just what the world's gotten for its money isn't clear, according to two studies published Friday in the medical journal Lancet.

Millions of people are now protected against diseases like yellow fever, sleeping under anti-malaria bed nets and taking AIDS drugs. Much beyond that, it's tough to gauge the effectiveness of pricey programs led by the United Nations and its partners, and in some cases, big spending may even be counterproductive, the studies say.

Trying to show health campaigns actually saved lives is "a very difficult scientific dilemma," said Tim Evans, a senior World Health Organization official who worked on one of the papers.

In one paper, WHO researchers examined the impact of various global health initiatives during the last 20 years.

They found some benefits, like increased diagnosis of tuberculosis cases and higher vaccination rates. But they also concluded some U.N. programs hurt health care in Africa by disrupting basic services and leading some countries to slash their health spending.

In another paper, Chris Murray of the University of Washington and colleagues tracked how much has been spent in public health in the last two decades _ the figure jumped from $5.6 billion in 1990 to $21.8 billion in 2007 _ and where it's gone. Much of that money is from taxpayers in the West. The U.S. was the biggest donor, contributing more than $10 billion in 2007.

They found some countries don't get more donations even if they're in worse shape. Ethiopia and Uganda both receive more money than Nigeria, Pakistan or Bangladesh, all of whom have bigger health crises.

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Some experts were surprised how long it took simply to consider if the world's health investment paid off.

Richard Horton, the Lancet's editor, labeled it "scandalous" and "reckless" health officials haven't carefully measured how they used the world's money.

Experts said that in some cases, the U.N. was propping up dysfunctional health systems. "If you've got rotten governments, no amount of development aid is going to fix that," said Elizabeth Pisani, an AIDS expert who once worked for the U.N., citing Zimbabwe as a prime example.

Murray and colleagues also found AIDS gets at least 23 cents of every health dollar going to poor countries. Globally, AIDS causes fewer than 4 percent of deaths.

"Funds in global health tend to go to whichever lobby group shouts the loudest, with AIDS being a case in point," said Philip Stevens of International Policy Network, a London think tank.

In WHO's study, researchers admitted whether health campaigns address countries' most pressing needs "is not known."

When Cambodia asked for help from 2003-2005, it said less than 10 percent of aid was needed for AIDS. But of the donations Cambodia got, more than 40 percent went to diseases including AIDS.

WHO acknowledged change was necessary, but insisted it needed even more money, warning fewer donations would jeopardize children's' lives.

U.N. agencies, universities and others working on public health routinely take from 2 to 50 percent of a donation for "administrative purposes" before it goes to needy countries.

Others said there is little incentive for health officials to commission an independent evaluation to find out what their programs have achieved.

"The public health community has convinced the public the only way to improve poor health in developing countries is by throwing a ton of money at it," Stevens said. "It is perhaps not coincidental that thousands of highly paid jobs and careers are also dependent on it."

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On the Net:

http://www.lancet.com

http://www.who.int

http://www.healthmetricsandevaluation.org

LONDON — In the last two decades, the world has spent more than $196 billion trying to save people from death and disease in poor countries. But just what the world's gotten for its money isn't...
LONDON — In the last two decades, the world has spent more than $196 billion trying to save people from death and disease in poor countries. But just what the world's gotten for its money isn't...
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- Horst I'm a Fan of Horst 24 fans permalink

The late Omar Bongo of Gabon had an estimated 50 to 75 residences­...many of them in France. That's where foreign aid money to Gabon went.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:18 AM on 06/21/2009
- ailbhe I'm a Fan of ailbhe 13 fans permalink

The money is siphoned off to so many different people at the top that there is practically nothing left to reach the people who need it. That is the problem with a huge international bureaucracy, no accountability, huge potential for unpunished corruption.

It would be better to divide aid up for how much we want to give each needy community and send the money directly to a non profit organisation on the ground with a proven track record of efficiency and genuine concern for the people to provide what they require. They should also have open accountability for every cent that anybody can investigate at any time.

People support the UN out of lofty ideals of what they wish it were but what it never will be. Those who care for the poorest should be more concerned about getting rid of responsibility for the poor from this corrupt entity because it will never be accountable, it swallows huge amount of money achieving nothing for the poor and as a result millions will continue to die.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 AM on 06/21/2009
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Actually, this accounting of the studies was through the looking glass.

What the studies actually found was massive problems with siphoning this money away from the United Nations and putting it in non profit organizations instead.

Since 1990, when the UN controlled more that 50% of the money, to today, when only 21% is controlled by the UN, these studies show that this has hurt delivery of services.

These two studies repudiated the privatization of international health care resources, where reading this report you might believe the opposite, that it repudiated public international health care resources.

Like I said, this was through the looking glass, and you shouldn't believe everything you read.

Especially something as incredible as this report was, on the face of it, it did not seem very likely at all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 PM on 06/23/2009
- blueshield I'm a Fan of blueshield 79 fans permalink

This is one of those revolving door arguments: complaining on one hand that too much money is 'wasted' administering the aid programs, and on the other complaining that there is not enough administration of the aid to measure it's effect on longevity.

Corruption and waste are a feature of any human enterprise, and more so when the governments of the worst off countries are dysfunctional or corrupt. Is that a justification for abandoning their citizens to suffer and die in squalor without medicine? Fraud and corruption are a universal feature of health insurance in developed nations too.

The underlying issue, noted by other posters here, is the attempt by profit seeking health groups to discredit and push out public and private charitable health programs which are preventing them having a monopoly in the markets.

When you read these types of reports, look for what is being offered as a solution. If none is offered, you can be sure the complainers are a million miles away from the actual health problem they're pretending to care about.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 AM on 06/20/2009

No one on here actually understands the problem. The problem is simple,the money NEVER reaches it supposedly benefactors. They call it AID but it comes with so much strings attached that you wont believe it.To make it worst,all the attached strings are to make sure that ,the poor,the real needy dont get to benefit from it.

I am saying this from an eye witness account. Take for instant in my country,an "AID" was to build classrooms in schools,but as if there are no contractors in the country,the contract has to be given out to Westerners and Western coorporations. Guess what,It cost more than a thousand times more to do that,as a result,Millions od dollars shall be spent to deliver a school with 4 classrooms.

Now ,explain to me how people in my country can build homes with 10 bedrooms,each bedroom the size of the said classrooms for approx. $ 50k and yet it cost Millions of dollars to do the same when a westerner gets the contract to do the same Job?

Another thing going on is the IMF and World Bank loans. From an eye witness account again,IMF once gave out loans to my country with the condition that ,it be spent on get brand new 4x4s for government officials. Now,we are talking about a country where school kids dont have desks to sit on in classrooms,the sit on the dust because the floors are uncemented. Kids dont have neither books,pencil or chalk to use. ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 AM on 06/19/2009
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Hi Mendelcrosses,

You have left me confused, beyond your appeal to anecdote, in your anecdote you say,

"Take for instant in my country,an "AID" was to build classrooms in schools,but as if there are no contractors in the country,the contract has to be given out to Westerners and Western coorporations. Guess what,It cost more than a thousand times more to do that,as a result,Millions od dollars shall be spent to deliver a school with 4 classrooms­."

Yet here, you say you live in the United Kingdom:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/02/27/obamas-budget-undoing-rea_n_170446.html?show_comment_id=21383878#comment_21383878

Now, the IMF did give a loan to the UK in 1976 that was then, the largest loan in history, to rescue the UK. But I don't think they used it to buy 4x4s.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 PM on 06/19/2009
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I'd say the simple solution is "expat"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 PM on 06/20/2009
- take10 I'm a Fan of take10 60 fans permalink
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That money was split among the UN delegates! It never left New York! That's why there is no proof that it works. Another case of trackless funds!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:55 AM on 06/19/2009
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This take on these two studies is sort of like the republican take on public health care.

Reading this, you would think the United Nations was somehow found at fault (actually, the studies found that part of the problem is that the United Nations role has shrunk (to 21% of funding in 2007, from more than half of funding in 1990)). This is a repudiation of the privatization of health care, twisted here to seem a repudiation of the public role in health care, and of the United Nations.

The quote selected,

""Funds in global health tend to go to whichever lobby group shouts the loudest, with AIDS being a case in point," said Philip Stevens of International Policy Network, a London think tank."

is highly offensive and also very revealing, not just of the mindset, but of the agenda. The IPN is dedicated to curing third world countries of public health systems and replacing them with private health systems like in the US.

Please compare Ms. Cheng's report to AFP's or other reports, see for yourself:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5j2VmiLY6S8Y08gqKOtZmzODjggOw

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 PM on 06/18/2009

I visited Kosovo last summer and was disappointed to hear so many criticisms of the UN - both from the Kosovars and from a Brit who walked away from a UN job (his UN coworkers thought he was insane).

Unfortunately, many countries appoint people to UN jobs as a form of political patronage, not because they're especially well qualified. A UN job guarantees a comfortable salary, numerous perks, and effective legal immunity, and the people with the jobs are more interested in keeping playing interoffice politics than actually doing work.

So you end up with incredibly inefficient bureaucracy. As a liberal, it frustrates me when conservatives belittle institutions like the UN and the Hague and believe that other countries should be subject to them but for some unfathomable reason the US should be above them. On the other hand, there is clearly some truth to the notion that the UN needs reform. It's a wonderful idea on paper, but it's woefully inefficient at what it tries to do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:12 PM on 06/18/2009

Reminds me of the book "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man". Essentially some of these programs are nothing more than instruments to launder world money into the pockets of a few. Not all programs, mind you. But there needs to be better oversight.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:44 PM on 06/18/2009
- coyote4 I'm a Fan of coyote4 70 fans permalink
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20,000 children were d.ying every day from preventable diseases (such as those caused by filthy drinking water) TWENTY YEARS AGO when I first wrote about this issue.

Today, after billions of leftist UN dollars, 20,000 children are STILL d.ying every day from preventable diseases..­..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:38 PM on 06/18/2009
- reedaleddy I'm a Fan of reedaleddy 2 fans permalink
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Its all a money game to the owners of the world we are not but cattle to them. The poor will never see that money, more jails, more power, and more weapons for wars to control population is all the remaining money that is not taking by the rich goes to. Why even try anymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:21 PM on 06/18/2009
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