Sustainable financing – that is, funding that is sufficient, flexible and predictable – is essential for WHO to fulfil its role and mandate. Only with sustainable financing can WHO secure and retain talent and expertise and remain free from undue influence on its work. A strong, independent WHO is needed to protect the world from disease and other threats, and work towards health for all.
Between early 2021 and April 2022, Member States formed the WHO Sustainable Financing Working Group to find long-term solutions for the financing of WHO.
The recommendations of the Working Group, presented to the Seventy-fifth World Health Assembly, seek agreement to fully fund the core budget of WHO with flexible funds, including through a regular increase of assessed contributions, which will rise gradually, starting in 2024, with a view to cover 50% of the base budget agreed on for 2022-2023 before 2030-2031, and by 2028-2029 if possible.
The Working Group also recommends initiatives to strengthen governance, transparency, accountability, efficiency and compliance, and requests that the WHO Secretariat work with an agile Member State task group to build on budgetary oversight and accountability
initiatives.