GLOBAL FUND OBSERVER (GFO), an
independent newsletter about the Global Fund provided by Aidspan to over 7,000
subscribers in 170 countries.
Issue 93: 18 August 2008. (For
formatted web, Word and PDF versions of this and other issues, see www.aidspan.org/gfo)
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CONTENTS
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1. NEWS: Proposals
Submitted in Round 8 are Dramatically Larger than in Previous Rounds
Proposals that were submitted to the Global Fund in Round 8 are more
than twice as large, in average dollar value, as in any previous round. And the
total cost of all proposals submitted in Round 8 was $6.4 billion, up from $2.4
billion in Round 7.
2. UPDATE: Rolling
Continuation Channel (RCC)
Over the past year, the Global Fund has
invited CCMs to apply for “Rolling Continuation Channel”
continuation of 30 grants that were approaching the end of their first five
years. Of these, 19 have been approved for over $1 billion in additional
funding. A full analysis is provided of this little-known procedure for
extending grants.
3. NEWS: Precise Dates
Regarding Round 9 Are Now Known
A detailed timetable is provided of
“what will happen when” regarding Round 9. There is nothing to
prevent CCMs from starting work right now on their Round 9 proposals.
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1. NEWS: Proposals Submitted in Round
8 are Dramatically Larger than in Previous Rounds
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Proposals
that were submitted to the Global Fund in Round 8 are more than twice as large,
in average dollar value, as in any previous round.
Proposals
were submitted in June. The TRP will review the proposals shortly, and the
TRP’s recommendations will be made known to applicants in October.
Highlights
regarding the Round 8 proposals include:
- 102 countries
submitted 185 proposals in Round 8, which is 35 proposals more than were
submitted in Round 7, but about the same as the average over Rounds 1-7.
- The average
two-year cost of the proposals submitted in Round was $35 million,
dramatically up from $16 million in Round 7 and $12 million on average
over Rounds 1-7.
- The total
cost of the proposals submitted in Round 8 was $6.4 billion, up from $2.4
billion in Round 7 and $2.3 billion on average over Rounds 1-7.
- The number of HIV
proposals submitted in Round 8 was up by 30 percent from Round 7; the
number of malaria proposals was fractionally down; and the number of TB
proposals was up by 44 percent.
- The cost split
between the HIV / malaria / TB proposals submitted in Round 8 was 50% /
33% / 17%, close to the 52% / 36% / 13% that applied in Round 7.
- The proposals that
were submitted by countries outside Africa in Round 8 had a total two-year
cost that was 1.9 times the cost which applied in Round 7; for
Africa , the multiple was 3.4 times. (ForSouthern Africa , the multiple was a dramatic 5.0 times.) And African countries submitted Round 8 proposals representing nearly two thirds of the total cost ($4.2 billion out of $6.4 billion). - Approximately 10
percent of the funding requested in Round 8 came under the new option
where a proposal for a specific disease component could include a request
for health systems strengthening.
- Only 40 percent (75
of 185) of the Round 8 proposals opted to follow the Fund’s
recommendation (but not requirement) that the proposal be
“dual-track”, i.e. have one Principal Recipient from the
government sector and one from another sector.
- Fifty-seven percent
of the total cost of proposals submitted in Round 8 ($3.65 billion out of
$6.4 billion) came from just 18 percent of the 102 countries that
submitted proposals.
- When donors met in
2007 to estimate how much money the Fund might need over the years
2008-10, there was a strong informal sense that the mid-range scenario
(“Scenario B”) was the most likely. This Scenario assumed that
the two-year cost of Round 8 approvals would amount to $2.3 billion, with
Phase 2 and RCC renewals bringing the total approved in 2008 to $4
billion. If the TRP ends up recommending for approval 47% (by dollar
value) of proposals submitted in Round 8, which was the percentage that
applied in Round 7, the cost of Round 8 approvals will amount to $3.0
billion, which is $0.7 billion higher than the Scenario B assumption.
Furthermore, when Scenario B was developed, it had not been anticipated
that Round 9 would come only six months after Round 8.
Further details regarding some of these
points are provided in the following tables:
Table 1: Global Fund Proposals, Submitted and
Approved, by Round
|
Round |
Proposals submitted |
Of which, approved by Board |
Average cost of submitted proposals |
Average cost of approved proposals |
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|
Number |
Cost * |
Number (and % of submitted number) |
Cost * (and % of submitted cost) |
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|
Round 1 |
204 |
$1.5 b. |
58 |
(28%) |
$0.6 b. |
(38%) |
$7 m. |
$10 m. |
|
Round 2 |
229 |
$2.1 b. |
98 |
(43%) |
$0.9 b. |
(40%) |
$9 m. |
$9 m. |
|
Round 3 |
180 |
$1.8 b. |
71 |
(39%) |
$0.6 b. |
(33%) |
$10 m. |
$9 m. |
|
Round 4 |
173 |
$2.5 b. |
69 |
(40%) |
$1.0 b. |
(39%) |
$15 m. |
$14 m. |
|
Round 5 |
202 |
$3.3 b. |
63 |
(31%) |
$0.7 b. |
(22%) |
$16 m. |
$12 m. |
|
Round 6 |
196 |
$2.5 b. |
85 |
(43%) |
$0.8 b. |
(34%) |
$13 m. |
$10 m. |
|
Round 7 |
150 |
$2.4 b. |
73 |
(49%) |
$1.1 b. |
(47%) |
$16 m. |
$15 m. |
|
Round 8 |
185 |
$6.4 b. |
TBD |
|
TBD |
|
$35 m. |
TBD |
* In this and the following tables,
"Cost" means the upper ceiling for the budget for Years 1 to 2 (i.e.
for Phase 1). Cost does not include proposals approved under the "Rolling Continuation
Channel" option, or proposals only approved upon appeal.
TBD = To be determined; NA = Not Available
Table 2: Disease Component Results by Round
|
|
No.
of proposals submitted, number
approved, and % of
submitted proposals approved |
Cost of proposals submitted by disease, and % of total cost submitted |
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|
|
Round
6 |
Round
7 |
Round
8 |
Round
6 |
Round
7 |
Round
8 |
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|
HIV/AIDS |
82 |
32 |
39% |
64 |
26 |
41% |
83 |
TBD |
TBD |
NA |
NA |
$1.3 b. |
52% |
$3.2
b. |
50% |
|
Malaria |
59 |
19 |
32% |
45 |
28 |
62% |
43 |
TBD |
TBD |
NA |
NA |
$0.9 b. |
36% |
$2.1
b. |
33% |
|
TB |
55 |
34 |
62% |
41 |
19 |
46% |
59 |
TBD |
TBD |
NA |
NA |
$0.3 b. |
13% |
$1.1
b. |
17% |
|
Total |
196 |
85 |
43% |
150 |
73 |
49% |
185 |
TBD |
TBD |
$2.5 b. |
100% |
$2.4 b. |
100% |
$6.4
b. |
100% |
Table 3: Region Submissions by Round
|
|
Cost of proposals submitted, by region |
||
|
Global Fund Region |
Round 6 |
Round 7 |
Round 8 |
|
|
NA |
$0.3 b. |
$0.6 b. |
|
|
NA |
$0.5 b. |
$1.3 b. |
|
Eastern Europe and |
NA |
$0.2 b. |
$0.4 b. |
|
Latin America and the |
NA |
$0.2 b. |
$0.6 b. |
|
Middle East and |
NA |
$0.2 b. |
$0.3 b. |
|
South |
NA |
$0.3 b. |
$0.4 b. |
|
|
NA |
$0.2 b. |
$1.0 b. |
|
West and |
NA |
$0.5 b. |
$1.8 b. |
|
Total two-year upper ceiling
request: |
$2.5 b. |
$2.4 b. |
$6.4 b. |
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2. UPDATE: Rolling Continuation
Channel (RCC)
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As announced in previous issues of GFO, in November 2006 the Global Fund
Board created a new mechanism – the Rolling Continuation Channel (RCC)
– to allow applicants with strongly performing grants to apply for
continuing funding for up to an additional six years beyond the original
proposal term.
Three waves of RCC funding have now been
concluded. (The term “wave” is used to differentiate the RCC from
the rounds-based channel of funding.) The Technical Review Panel (TRP) has
questioned the value of having a separate RCC stream and has suggested that it
be merged with the rounds-based channel of funding.
The purpose of this article is to describe
how the RCC works; to present the results of the first three waves; to describe
changes made by the Global Fund Board after the first wave; and to report on
the observations of the TRP on Wave 3 and on the RCC architecture generally.
How the RCC works
Unlike the rounds-based channel, application
for the RCC is by invitation only. Approximately three times per year, all
grants that are nearing their expiry date are assessed by the Secretariat to
determine if they qualify for possible RCC funding. Countries whose grants have
demonstrated “strong performance,” as well as the potential for
impact and programmatic sustainability, may be invited by the Secretariat to
apply for funding under the RCC. However, approval for such funding is still
not guaranteed.
In order to qualify as a “strong
performer,” normally the grant must have received a performance rating of
“A” in more than half of the reviews conducted in the 18-month
period immediately preceding the determination of qualification (known as the
“qualification period”). The qualification period is usually
between Month 25 (i.e., the start of Year 3) and Month 42 (i.e., the middle of
Year 4) of a five-year grant.
Qualification decisions are made by the
Secretariat on a quarterly basis. For those who qualify for the RCC,
invitations to apply are issued about a year and a half before the scheduled
expiry date of the existing grant. The Secretariat provides applicants with a
proposal form which is a modified version of the one used for the rounds-based
channel. As with the rounds-based channel:
- RCC proposals are
reviewed by the TRP;
- The TRP assigns a
category rating to each proposal;
- only proposals rated
Category I or 2 are recommended for funding;
- the Global Fund
Board makes the final decisions on funding; and
- the full texts of
all proposals are posted on the Global Fund website after funding
decisions have been made.
Like the rounds-based channel, proposals
rated Category 3 or 4 are not recommended for funding. However, for the RCC,
Category 3 has been split into two, as follows:
- Category 3A:
(applicable only upon initial submission) is defined as follows:
“Not recommended for funding based on technical merit but strongly
encouraged to resubmit a revised proposal, taking into account the issues
raised by the TRP, for consideration in the next wave of Rolling
Continuation Channel proposals.”
- Category 3B:
(applicable only upon re-submission) is defined as follows: “Not
recommended for funding based on technical merit but encouraged to
resubmit through the Rounds-Based Channel following major revision.”
(Under the rounds-based channel, Category 3 is defined
simply as “proposals not recommended by the TRP in their present form,
but regarding which applicants are encouraged to submit improved applications
in future rounds.”)
Like funding under the rounds-based channel, RCC
funding is split into two phases; under the RCC, these are called
“terms.” The first term is for three years; the second term is for
up to three years.
Under the RCC, the objectives and scope of the
proposal must not be materially different from the objectives and scope of the
original proposal. However, the Global Fund strongly encourages applicants to
increase the scale of their proposed programmes, and to update epidemiological
information. In addition, the Global Fund acknowledges that changes to the
scope of the programmes may be required to respond to changing epidemiology (or
to changes in the country context).
CCMs (or Regional Coordinating Mechanisms)
that have been invited to apply for funding under the RCC must meet the same
six minimum eligibility requirements that all CCMs have to meet under
rounds-based funding.
Applicants may not request funding for
exactly the same activities and exactly the same scope of coverage through both
the rounds-based channel and the RCC.
In the event that there is not enough
funding to go around when the Board approves proposals, RCC proposals take
precedence over rounds-based proposals.
There is an appeals process under the RCC.
Applicants wishing to appeal have two choices. They can appeal immediately, and
if they are not successful, then they can re-submit the proposal under the next
round in the rounds-based channel. Alternatively, if they were originally
granted Category 3A, they can re-submit the proposal under the RCC, and if they
are still rated Category 3 (it would be a Category 3B rating the second time),
they can appeal this decision.
Unlike with the rounds-based channel, for
proposals submitted under the RCC the TRP may recommend that the Global Fund
Board make its approval conditional on the applicant removing a limited set of
specific elements from the proposal. (For proposals submitted under the
rounds-based channel, the TRP can only recommend that the proposal be accepted
or rejected in its entirety. There is an exception to this rule for Round 8; if
a proposal contains a separate section on health systems strengthening, the TRP
is allowed to recommend the entire proposal; or only the health systems
strengthening section; or only the proposal minus the health systems
strengthening section.)
Number of grants that
qualified for the RCC
Over the three waves that have taken place
thus far, 100 existing grants were considered by the Secretariat, of which 30
(30%) were invited to apply for RCC renewal. Of those that were invited to
apply, 27 (90%) chose to apply. Of the 27 that applied, 14 (52%) were approved
the first time they were considered, and 19 (70%) were approved either the
first time they were considered or after re-submission. The three-year budget
for the 19 that were approved was $1,008 million, and the total six-year budget
was $1,977 million, averaging $104 million per grant.
Further details are as per the following
two tables:
Table
1: RCC applications and results
|
Wave |
Number
of expiring grants considered |
Number
and % invited to apply |
Number
of proposals submitted |
Board
decision date |
Number
approved |
Total
budget, Years 1-3 |
Total
budget, Years 1-6 |
|
|
1 |
51 |
11 (22%) |
10 |
Nov 2007 |
5: |
(1 HIV, 3 malaria, 1 TB) |
$130 m. |
$207 m. |
|
2 |
31 |
11 (36%) |
10* |
Apr 2008 |
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