How to Leverage Trump’s Halt to WHO Funding Over COVID-19 Missteps

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President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that he is halting funding to the World Health Organization while his administration conducts a review of the U.N. entity’s mismanagement of the response to COVID-19.

The president is correct in noting that, had China been more transparent and cooperative, many lives could have been saved and economic damage avoided, and that the World Health Organization was too willing to take Chinese assurances at face value and was too slow to respond.

The WHO needs to be held accountable
and reformed to prevent repetition of these missteps, but the U.S. should be
focused on how best to pursue that goal.

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The details of the president’s policy are
unclear, particularly with respect to how it will be implemented and its impact.

The United States is the largest funder of the World Health Organization. According to the WHO, the U.S. provided $893 million, which was 15.9% of total WHO contributions to the 2018-2019 WHO two-year budget through the third quarter of 2019.

However, due to its budgetary practices, the U.S. pays its assessments to the WHO at the end of the calendar year. In essence, the U.S. pays its calendar year 2019 obligations with funding appropriated by Congress for fiscal year 2020. U.S. payments for 2020 will not be appropriated until later this year.

Moreover, because of the current
crisis, the U.S. likely expedited allocation of its voluntary contributions
appropriated for this year.

In other words, the decision to halt funding might not actually have much of a short-term financial impact on the WHO.

Perhaps that was the intent of the
announcement—not to undermine the WHO’s response in the current crisis, but to
signal U.S. dissatisfaction and to use its upcoming funding to leverage
reforms.

But that’s not how it’s being
interpreted. Already, other countries have expressed regret or condemnation of
the decision. Perhaps the most cynical is China, which is calling on the U.S. to “fulfill its obligations
to the World Health Organization.”

To better ensure that the intent of the
administration is understood, the State Department should release a fact sheet
clarifying what funding the U.S. has provided to the WHO in 2020; what funds
will be halted immediately under this policy; and what additional support the U.S. is providing to other international
organizations
and bilaterally to individual
countries
to assist them in responding to
COVID-19.

In addition, the U.S. should clarify
what it expects of WHO in order to restore U.S. confidence and support in the
future. At the very least, the U.S. should demand:

  • Approval and completion of an independent, external investigation into the WHO response to COVID-19 and the potential influence of China over its decisions.
  • A thorough review and revision of World Health Organization policies to enable it to respond more quickly to emerging pandemics, which must include full transparency and information-sharing on potential pandemics, automatic approval of visit requests by the WHO’s expert teams, and acknowledgement that travel restrictions are justified in the absence of such cooperation.
  • Restructuring of the WHO’s financing to concentrate on communicable diseases and responding to international health emergencies.

These demands are reasonable and justified given recent events and would help focus the World Health Organization on communicable diseases and responding to future international health emergencies, which would benefit every nation.

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