三大流行病:艾滋病毒、COVID-19和低收入和中等收入国家的债务。

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Ajar-African Journal of Aids Research Pub Date : 2022-07-01 DOI:10.2989/16085906.2022.2104168
Charles Birungi, Jaime Atienza Azcona, Daniel Munevar
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文评估了艾滋病毒和COVID-19大流行以及债务动态对发展中国家卫生、艾滋病毒和大流行防范以及应对相关融资的影响。我们使用一个新的数据集,对选定的发展中国家在卫生、艾滋病毒、COVID-19和偿债方面的政府支出的所有可用数据源进行了跨国系统分析。我们发现多边应对措施不足,随之而来的差距使这两大流行病得以茁壮成长。二十国集团暂停偿债倡议和共同框架只涵盖了占全球艾滋病毒感染者人口三分之一的国家。不断上升且不可持续的债务水平限制了政府保护其人民健康的能力。为应对高额债务支付,政府支出已经在下降。具体来说,偿债挤占了挽救生命的投资。2020年,每可用5美元,就有4美元用于偿债。只有1美元用于保健。这对各国防控工作具有约束力。即使为增加卫生支出作出了巨大努力,卫生筹资的前景仍然不容乐观。未来几年,预计139个国家将实施以削减支出为重点的财政整顿。这些发现表明,财政政策制定者应该关注公共债务的挤出效应和约束效应。为此,提出了务实的建议,将债务视为一个关键的政策杠杆,以加速终结发展中国家的艾滋病毒和COVID-19大流行,并将其作为解决日益严重的不平等现象的关键条件,并确保债务成为一种收益,而不是负担。
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A pandemic triad: HIV, COVID-19 and debt in low- and middle-income countries.

This article assesses the impact of the HIV and COVID-19 pandemics and debt dynamics on health, HIV and pandemic preparedness and response-related financing in developing countries. Using a novel dataset, we did a cross-national systematic analysis of all data sources available for government expenditures on health, HIV, COVID-19 and debt servicing in selected developing countries. We found an inadequate multilateral response with the ensuing gaps allowing both pandemics to thrive. The G20 Debt Service Suspension Initiative and the Common Framework only covered countries with a third of the global population of people living with HIV. Rising and unsustainable debt levels are limiting the capacity of governments to protect the health of their populations. Government spending is already falling in response to high debt payments. Specifically, debt servicing is crowding out lifesaving investments. In 2020, for every USD 5 available, USD 4 was spent on debt servicing. Only USD 1 was invested in health. This is a binding constraint on countries' efforts to control COVID-19. Even with a gargantuan effort to increase health expenditure, the outlook for health financing remains negative. Fiscal consolidation, with a heavy emphasis on expenditure cuts, is expected to take place across 139 countries in the coming years. These findings suggest that fiscal policymakers should be concerned about the crowding-out and constraining effects of public debt. To this end, pragmatic recommendations are made to treat and cancel debt as a critical policy lever to accelerate the end of the HIV and COVID-19 pandemics in developing countries as a key condition to addressing the growing inequalities and to ensure debt can be a benefit, not a burden.

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来源期刊
Ajar-African Journal of Aids Research
Ajar-African Journal of Aids Research 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
8.30%
发文量
38
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: African Journal of AIDS Research (AJAR) is a peer-reviewed research journal publishing papers that make an original contribution to the understanding of social dimensions of HIV/AIDS in African contexts. AJAR includes articles from, amongst others, the disciplines of sociology, demography, epidemiology, social geography, economics, psychology, anthropology, philosophy, health communication, media, cultural studies, public health, education, nursing science and social work. Papers relating to impact, care, prevention and social planning, as well as articles covering social theory and the history and politics of HIV/AIDS, will be considered for publication.
期刊最新文献
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