Tracking the global humanitarian response to Covid-19

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Author(s)
Koji Flynn-Do (IRC) and Dan Walton (DI)
Publication language
English
Pages
23pp
Date published
29 Apr 2021
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
COVID-19, Funding and donors

In March 2020, when Covid-19 was declared a global pandemic, UN OCHA launched the Global Humanitarian Response Plan (GHRP) to support the response in low- and middle-income countries. Although the GHRP was not the only vehicle for responding to the pandemic, it accounted for the majority of international humanitarian aid for the crisis. On 31 December 2020, the GHRP officially concluded.

Two key takeaways emerge from IRC’s and DI’s joint analysis of the Covid-19 humanitarian financing data. First, the available data indicates a relatively bleak picture: funding for the Covid-19 humanitarian response has not been at the scale, speed or flexibility required to meet increasing needs, nor has enough funding gone directly to NGO implementers with greatest access to hard-to-reach, vulnerable populations. Second, inadequate reporting has obscured a complete understanding of where and which organizations funding is flowing to, and how quickly it is being disbursed to implementers. This limits the international community’s ability to plan an effective, coordinated and comprehensive response.

This paper offers a set of recommendations for donors and UN agency partners, such as prioritizing funding to front-line NGO implementers in fragile contexts, normalizing flexible and multiyear funding, and improving transparency and reporting to public platforms.