World Bank |
The World Bank announced
Saturday a new program to mobilize funds quickly against virulent disease
outbreaks after the world was caught unprepared in the 2014 Ebola disaster in
West Africa.
AFP
report continues:
World
Bank President Jim Yong Kim said the new Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility
(PEF) will accelerate global and national responses to disease outbreaks that
threaten large populations and fragile economies.
He
said the PEF, a combination of catastrophe insurance and bonds, is a direct
reaction to the sluggish donor response to the outbreak of Ebola, which
eventually killed close to 11,000 in West Africa and shut down economic
activity for months.
“Pandemics
pose a serious threat to global health and economic security,” said Kim.
“The
recent Ebola crisis in West Africa was a tragedy that we were simply not
prepared for. It was a wake-up call to the entire world.”
“There
is no effective international system ready to respond quickly to a pandemic.”
Kim,
a medical doctor and expert on health and disease in developing countries, put
the World Bank in the lead of the response to Ebola at the time.
But
he acknowledged that it took months to bring together the hundreds of millions
of dollars needed to pay for deploying health personnel, supplies, and other
relief to Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia.
In
the meantime, he said, the death toll rose ten-fold.
Kim
announced the creation of the PEF at the gathering of G7 finance ministers in
Sendai, Japan.
He
said the group of global powers had pressed the World Bank last year to develop
a quicker way for the world to respond to pandemics.
Kim
said Japan was the first to commit support for the PEF, with a US$50 million
contribution.
The
insurance will cover outbreaks of several classes of infectious diseases most
at risk for epidemics: new orthomyxoviruses including influenza pandemic
viruses A, B and C; coronaviruses like SARS and MERS; filoviruses like Ebola
and Marburg; and other zoonotic diseases — those that move between animals and
humans — including Crimean Congo, Rift Valley and Lassa fever.
That
list does not include Zika, the deadly mosquito-borne virus spreading through
the Americas. But Kim said the bank is also putting together a separate
emergency “cash window” to address that and other outbreaks not covered.
Under
the program the 77 least developed countries will be covered by the insurance.
Unlike
common insurance that repays losses after a disaster, the PEF insurance is
designed to release funds as soon as a disease outbreak reaches a certain level
as defined by specific criteria.
Kim
said the World Bank has worked with insurers on the product, which will total
$500 million at first, and is confident the global financial markets will
accept it.
“If
we had had the PEF up and running in mid-2014, the Ebola outbreak would have
looked very different,” he said.
“The countries and the world, and the insurance industry, have the same incentives to prevent the spread of pandemics.”
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