U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration announced last month a $4 billion commitment to COVAX, the global COVID-19 vaccine distribution facility, which will be followed by a broader strategy to strengthen health systems, according to one of Biden’s top advisers.
The $4 billion was split in half. The first $2 billion “tranche” is intended “just to get vaccines out the door,” national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Monday. “The other $2 billion, we are seeking to leverage contributions from countries around the world, not just for straightforward vaccine delivery, but vaccine delivery in the context of building up and strengthening the capacity of health systems,” he said at an event hosted by the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition.
“That’s just a down payment on a larger strategy that the U.S. is going to undertake,” Sullivan said. Sullivan described a “variable geography” of existing global health institutions and said it is the Biden administration’s intent to “turn it into something that really reduces gaps and overlaps and redundancies and is truly streamlined to be as effective as possible going forward.”
One of the first steps, he suggested, will be undertaking repair work within the U.S. government’s own development and global health agencies to ensure they are able to deliver on their objectives with transparency and accountability.
Sullivan said that while former President Barack Obama's administration made big gains in these areas, “over the last four years there’s been a fair amount of atrophy on the underlying components of what’s required to really truly deliver effective development outcomes.”
Why it matters: There is speculation that the Biden administration could push for a rethink of how U.S. global health institutions are organized to move away from disease-specific “vertical” initiatives and toward a more integrated health systems approach.