Countries Join 16 Existing GFF Countries, as the GFF Prepares to Expand to a Total of 50 Countries in the Next Five Years

MAPUTO, MOZAMBIQUE – The Global Financing Facility in support of Every Woman Every Child (GFF) announced today at its board meeting in Maputo, Mozambique, that ten new countries joined the GFF, a country-led model of development finance that brings together multiple sources of financing in a synergistic way to support countries’ priorities. The new GFF countries are Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Central African Republic, Côte d’Ivoire, Haiti, Indonesia, Madagascar, Malawi and Rwanda.

The GFF is a broad partnership that has demonstrated in countries that the concept developed two years ago works: women, children and adolescents are benefitting from the new model of financing that the GFF has developed—leading to high demand from countries that are interested in becoming part of the GFF,” said Ferozuddin Feroz, Minister of Public Health of Afghanistan, one of the new GFF countries.

The GFF is expanding beyond the 16 existing GFF countries[1] with the support of the governments of Canada, Norway and the United Kingdom; the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; and MSD for Mothers. The Gates Foundation recently announced a US$200 million pledge to the replenishment of the GFF Trust Fund, a multidonor trust fund that is hosted by the World Bank Group and that supports the work of the broader GFF partnership.

We are pleased to announce that ten more countries supported by GFF will align partners around a country-driven investment case to save lives and improve the health and well-being of millions,” said Mariam Claeson, Director of the GFF. “With more resources the GFF can reach even more women, children and young people at the most critical periods of their lives: birth, the early years and adolescence.”

In September 2017 at the United Nations General Assembly, the GFF launched its replenishment, with the goal of raising US$2 billion to respond to countries’ interest in joining the GFF. With US$2 billion, the GFF can reach a total of 50 countries during the next five years. Each dollar invested in the GFF Trust Fund, is catalytic and links to several sources of funding—domestic government resources, financing from the World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA) and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), aligned external financing, and private sector resources. This approach enables the estimated financing gap of US$33 billion per year to be closed.

Although countries have made considerable progress during the past 25 years in improving the health and wellbeing of women, children and adolescents, too many are still dying and suffering from preventable conditions—in considerable part because of a large financing gap. This new funding will help countries reach those who do not yet have access to quality services and accelerate progress on reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health and nutrition. The 50 countries the GFF could expand to in the next five years account for 96% of the US$33 billion annual financing gap and 5.2 million maternal and child deaths each year.

The World Bank Group and the United Nations launched the GFF at the Third International Conference on Financing for Development in Addis Ababa in July 2015 in support of Every Woman Every Child, and as part of a global conversation about how to finance the Sustainable Development Goals.

The GFF employs a country-driven model: each of the new countries will define its approach through a process led by the government that involves a broad range of stakeholders.

About the Global Financing Facility

The Global Financing Facility (GFF) is a multi-stakeholder partnership that supports country-led efforts to improve the health of women, children and adolescents. With the GFF, countries are making smarter, more prioritized, results-focused investments toward greater impact on the health, nutrition and well-being of women, children and adolescents; building capacity for more sustainable funding for this agenda; and exploring more innovative ways to work with the private sector. The GFF Trust Fund is supported by the governments of Canada, Norway and the United Kingdom; the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; and MSD for Mothers. Learn more: www.globalfinancingfacility.org and @theGFF

 

[1] Bangladesh, Cameroon, DRC, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Uganda and Vietnam