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    Home»Business»WHO restructures, cuts budget after US withdrawal
    Business

    WHO restructures, cuts budget after US withdrawal

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    [GENEVA] The World Health Organization tried to stabilise its finances at its annual assembly which ended on Tuesday, but still remains well short of reaching its already reduced target.

    Hit by the withdrawal of its biggest donor, the United States, the WHO trimmed its already smaller 2026-2027 budget from US$5.3 billion to US$4.2 billion.

    The UN health agency’s programme budget for 2024-2025 was US$6.8 billion.

    The slimmer budget plan was approved during the World Health Assembly, which serves as the WHO’s decision-making body.

    But a funding gap of some US$1.7 billion remains.

    How WHO funding works

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    WHO budgets run in two-year cycles.

    Founded in 1948, the agency initially received all its funding through “assessed contributions”: nations’ membership fees calculated according to wealth and population.

    However, the WHO became increasingly reliant on “voluntary contributions”, which only go towards outcomes specified by the donor.

    By the 2020-2021 cycle, assessed contributions represented only 16 per cent of the approved programme budget.

    And the organisation had long been over-reliant on voluntary funding from a few major donors.

    2026-2027 budget

    In 2022, member states agreed to increase their assessed contributions to represent 50 per cent of the WHO’s core budget by the 2030-2031 cycle at the latest – giving the WHO more stable, flexible and predictable income streams.

    They upped membership fees by 20 per cent as part of the 2024-2025 budget.

    At this year’s assembly, countries approved another 20 per cent increase in membership fees, which should represent an additional US$90 million in revenue per year.

    They also endorsed the WHO’s 2026-2027 budget of US$4.2 billion.

    “Your approval of the next increase in assessed contributions was a strong vote of confidence in your WHO at this critical time,” the organisation’s chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Tuesday in closing the assembly.

    Most of that money is already assured.

    “We have now secured 60 per cent of our base budget for 2026-2027; a remarkable result in today’s financial climate,” said Hanan Balkhy, the WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean regional director.

    But that means the agency is still US$1.7 billion short, despite the reduced budget.

    Pledges

    At a pledging event last week, donors put in an additional US$210 million for the 2025-2028 investment round, supporting the WHO’s base budget.

    That included US$80 million from Switzerland, US$57 million from the Novo Nordisk Foundation, US$13.5 million from Sweden and US$6 million from Qatar.

    “In a challenging climate for global health, these funds will help us to preserve and extend our life-saving work,” said Tedros.

    United States

    Upon returning to office in January, US President Donald Trump started the one-year process for leaving the WHO, and had frozen virtually all US foreign aid.

    The United States was traditionally the WHO’s largest donor. Washington’s departure, and its refusal to pay its membership fees for 2024 and 2025, has left the WHO reeling financially.

    Washington did not attend the World Health Assembly.

    However, US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. sent a video message in which he branded the organisation as bloated and moribund, and urged other countries to “consider joining us” in creating new institutions instead.

    Kennedy said the UN agency was under undue influence from China, gender ideology and the pharmaceutical industry.

    Reorganisation

    The budget cuts have forced the WHO to reorganise.

    It is reducing its executive management team from 14 to seven due to the dramatic US funding cuts.

    The number of departments is being reduced from 76 to 34.

    The WHO has not yet announced any large-scale layoffs, unlike other UN agencies. AFP

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