Tedros Urges Countries to Support ‘Modest Budget’ – And Help Close $1.7 Billion Gap
Dr Tedros addresses the 78th WHA

The World Health Organization (WHO) faces “significant challenges” amid “significant achievements”, characterised by a 21% budget cut alongside the imminent adoption of a pandemic agreement, Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told the opening of the World Health Assembly on Monday.

Tedros appealed to member states to support its “extremely modest” budget, reduced from $5.3 billion to $4.2 billion for the 2026-2027 biennium as a result of the United States’ withdrawal from the global body.

But this modest amount isn’t even in the bank yet.  It relies on member states agreeing to increase membership fees and receiving more donations via the WHO’s next Investment Round to be held in Geneva on Tuesday.

“Assuming you approve the increased assessed contributions [membership fees], and thanks to the investment round, we’re confident that we have already secured more than $2.6 billion of the funding for the next biennium. That leaves an anticipated budget gap of more than $1.7 billion,” said Tedros.

He added that raising that amount in the current landscape would be a challenge but described the figure – $2.1 billion a year – as “extremely modest” for an organisation “working on the ground in 150 countries with the vast mission and mandate that member states have given us”.

“$2.1 billion is the equivalent of global military expenditure every eight hours,” said Tedros, and “a quarter of what the tobacco industry spends on advertising and promotion every single year”. 

The 78th WHA opened in Geneva on Monday.

Reducing costs has led to a reformulation of the organisation and with significant staff layoffs ahead.

The WHA gave a round of applause to outgoing executive team members Dr Mike Ryan, Dr Samira Asma, Dr Bruce Aylward, Dr Catharina Boehme, Dr Li Ailan and Dr Jerome Salomon, who will be leaving the WHO as part of this process.

“A reduced workforce means a reduced scope of work. The organisation simply cannot do everything member states have asked it to do with the resources available,” he added.

Steep bilateral aid cuts

However, the dismantling of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and deep cuts to the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) have strained the finances of many member states, some of which may not be in a position to increase their contributions to WHO.

“Many Ministers have told me that sudden and steep cuts to bilateral aid are causing severe disruption in their countries and imperilling the health of millions of people,” Teros acknowledged.

“In at least 70 countries, patients are missing out on treatments. Health facilities have closed, health workers have lost their jobs, and people face increased out-of-pocket health spending.

“Although this is a challenge, many countries also see this as an opportunity to leave behind an era of aid dependency and accelerate the transition to sustainable self-reliance based on domestic resources.”

But at the same time, several countries were doubling and tripling their defence spending, spending “vast sums protecting themselves against attacks from other countries, but relatively little on protecting themselves from an invisible enemy that can cause far more havoc and damage,” said Tedros, pointing out that COVID-19 killed an estimated 20 million people.

Key achievements

Tedros described the pandemic agreement as a “historic moment” amid “significant opposition”.

In the past year, the WHO coordinated the response to 51 graded emergencies in 89 countries including “outbreaks, natural disasters, conflicts and more”.

It delivered urgently needed specialist medical supplies worth $196 million to 80 countries, supporting countries to address cholera, Marburg and Ebola.

WHO is poised to resume aid to Gaza as soon as Israel lifts its blockade, said Tedros, who  appealed to member states to assist the more than 10,000 patients who need medical evacuation out of Gaza. 

“War is not the solution. Peace and political solutions are the solution,” he stressed.

Tedros stressed that the WHO’s “increased focus on science, data and digital health” is “the future of the organisation”.

“WHO’s normative standard-setting work is its bread and butter, and we have streamlined processes to give member states the highest quality, evidence-based advice as fast as possible,” said Tedros. “Last year, there were 65 million downloads of WHO publications, guidance and other materials.”

Swiss support

Welcoming delegates to Geneva, Swiss Federal Council member Élisabeth Baume-Schneider stressed that her country was committed to supporting the WHO, and would contribute $80 million to the organisation over the next four years.

“The WHO is the only real global platform for cooperation on health matters which has legitimacy, respect and can do the job,” said Schneider.

“It is the only international organisation dealing with health which is run by its member states, and that means shared responsibility… We, as her member states, need to demonstrate that we are ready to reconsider our relationship with the organisation and ensure that we offer our full support.”

WHA president, Dr Teodoro Herbosa of Philippines, urged the assembly to be focused on “unity not unilateralism, solidarity not isolation”.

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