BLOGS

 
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What have we learned after six months of tracking covid-19 funding? We don’t just need more money, we need a different approach.

Ruth Hill, Dillan Patel and Michèle Plichta

Covid-19 has demonstrated, more than ever before, the weakness of our current begging bowl approach to funding disasters, where the money is found after disaster strikes and is given in a discretionary manner. Large amounts of money have been given at great speed, but it is not enough. And when everyone is in need at the same time, the lack of a plan results in an inequitable allocation of funds.

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7 habits of highly effective DRF

Zoë Scott, Head of Multilateral Programmes and Ruth Hill, Chief Economist

At the Centre for Disaster Protection, we spend a lot of time considering what ‘good’ disaster risk financing (DRF) looks like in practice. Here we share our current working list, our ‘7 habits of highly effective DRF’. Some habits have been more neglected than others, and we are releasing guidance notes for the most overlooked, which aim to provide very practical guidance, tools and examples of how to build this habit into your DRF initiative.

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‘We want a world where disasters are paid for with money not with lives’, says Daniel Clarke at Climate: Red

Daniel Clarke, Director of the Centre for Disaster Protection, joined Alexandra Rüth, Head of Anticipation Hub and Ben Webster, Head of Secretariat at Risk Informed-Early Action Partnership, in a ‘Call for Collaboration’ at the IFRC’s virtual global summit Climate:Red Headline Feature: Scaling-up Anticipatory Humanitarian Action – More. Better. Together.

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Funding covid-19 response: Tracking global humanitarian and development flows to meet crisis needs

by Ruth Hill, Dillan Patel, Yi Yang, and Jon Gascoigne

Over the next few months, the Centre for Disaster Protection will be tracking humanitarian and development funding directed at helping low and middle-income countries manage the health and economic costs of covid-19. This is our first update on how much has been committed and disbursed and to whom. Future blogs will examine in many of these issues in more depth, such as the degree to which this is new money, and whether finances are being received in a timely manner. We will also highlight specific countries where needs appear to be great, but funding for response is low.

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The future of pandemic financing: Trigger design and 2020 hindsight

by Conor Meenan, Lead Risk Finance Specialist, Centre for Disaster Protection

By 17 April, all seven of the World Bank’s Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility (PEF) payout conditions had been met, triggering the release of $195.84 million from its insurance window in response to the covid-19 pandemic.

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The future of pandemic financing: Will the Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility create a global market?

by Daniel Clarke, Director, Centre for Disaster Protection and Joanne Meusz, Lead Risk Finance Specialist, Centre for Disaster Protection

Lawrence Summers, former World Bank Chief Economist, called the Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility (PEF) a symptom of “financial goofiness” within the World Bank. But was this criticism fair? Or, will history show that the PEF played an important part in creating a global market for pandemic instruments that protect the world’s poorest people?

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The future of pandemic financing: What can we learn from the Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility?

by Zoë Scott, Head of Multilateral Programmes, Centre for Disaster Protection

There has been a lot of media interest and discussion online about the World Bank’s Pandemic Emergency Financing Facility (PEF) in light of covid-19. The PEF was launched in 2017 and was an ambitious innovation, intended to help deliver finance to the world’s poorest countries if faced with a pandemic. The insurance window has now triggered for covid-19, which is good news, although the timing is far from ideal given that we know early action is the most effective approach when responding to disasters (more on timeliness and triggers in a future blogpost).

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At every stage, acting early pays

by Ruth Hill, Chief Economist, Centre for Disaster Protection

Covid-19 is the largest global shared experience of crisis since the Second World War. This shared experience is giving many of us a personal understanding of some fundamental truths about crises that we had hitherto, luckily, avoided. Perhaps most notably, we are learning the value of acting early to reduce impacts—and that the economic and social repercussions are large and will be long-lasting. As we replay the past few months in our heads it is hard to not think about the actions that could have been taken to limit the spread of the disease. The benefits of acting early—such as travel restrictions to contain the spread or investing in testing capacity—are painfully clear to us. This is something that we have seen play out across crises in the past. From pandemics to floods to drought, we often respond too late. But when we collectively get it right and respond early, we save lives and reduce the economic cost.

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Covid-19 caught the world off guard - pandemics must never surprise us again

by Daniel Clarke, Director, Centre for Disaster Protection

Covid-19 caught the world off guard. Public health experts and commercial risk modellers knew that something like this was quite likely, and that the world was woefully underprepared. A long line of the great and the good, from Bill Gates to the World Health Organization, pleaded with the world to listen to the experts and invest in prevention and preparedness before it was too late, but the money didn’t come.

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Q&A with Daniel Clarke, Director

The Centre for Disaster Protection has now appointed its full leadership team. You can find out more in a series of Q&As with each of them. Here Daniel Clarke, Director, talks about who has inspired him and what in DRF is exciting him currently.

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Q&A with Sophie Evans, Associate Director - Advisory

The Centre for Disaster Protection has now appointed its full leadership team. You can find out more in a series of Q&As with each of them. Here Sophie Evans, Head of Country Programmes, explains what she’s excited to get working on and why the COP was her favourite conference of 2019.

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International financial institutions need to do more to protect the poorest from disasters

Wars, bad weather and unstable geology threaten to return millions of people to poverty and remain a major obstacle to others making their first escape. From flood swept-Mozambique to drought-stricken Somalia to war-ravaged Yemen we witness the terrible human and economic costs of crises. The poorest people in the poorest countries bear the brunt. They are six times more likely than people in rich nations to be injured, lose their home, be displaced or require emergency assistance. Climate change threatens to make things worse, pushing a further 100 million people into extreme poverty by 2030.

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