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10/29/2021

Joint G20 Finance and Health Ministers Meeting Communiqué | U.S. Department of the Treasury

Joint G20 Finance and Health Ministers Meeting Communiqué
October 29, 2021

29 October 2021, Rome, Italy
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to have profound impacts worldwide. The severe
mortality, morbidity and hospitalisation of a ected patients have clearly revealed
weaknesses in pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response (PPR), health systems and
services, information, and education. At the same time, the pandemic has taken a heavy toll
on the global economy. Economic recovery remains highly divergent across and within
countries, more severely a ecting emerging and developing economies, and populations in
situations of vulnerability, including poorer households, women and girls, persons with
disabilities, elderly, and children. The pandemic has exposed significant shortcomings in the
world’s ability to coordinate the global health response. These have le us ill prepared for
the challenges of responding to the pandemic and to its socio[1]economic impact, and are
hampering the advancement of the United Nations (UN) Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs). The pandemic has also highlighted the need to better
understand and bridge the gaps in our systems. We reiterate our commitment to bring the
pandemic under control everywhere as soon as possible, put people at the center of
preparedness and to strengthen our collective e orts to prepare for, prevent, detect, report,
and respond to health emergencies, notably promoting resilience of health systems and
communities. We recognise the role of extensive COVID-19 immunisation as a global public
good. We rea irm our support to all collaborative e orts to ensure a timely and equitable
access to safe, a ordable, quality and e ective vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics, and
personal protective equipment, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). To
help advance toward the global goals of vaccinating at least 40 percent of the population in
all countries by the end of 2021 and 70 percent by mid-2022, as recommended by the World
Health Organization (WHO)’s global vaccination strategy, we will take steps to help boost the
supply of vaccines and essential medical products and inputs in developing countries and
remove relevant supply and financing constraints.
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Joint G20 Finance and Health Ministers Meeting Communiqué | U.S. Department of the Treasury

We reiterate our support to strengthen the resilience of supply chains, to increase vaccine
distribution, administration, as well as local and regional manufacturing capacity in LMICs,
including through voluntary technology transfer hubs in various regions, such as the newly
established mRNA Hubs in South Africa, Brazil and Argentina, and through joint production
and processing arrangements. We will continue to support the Access to COVID-19 Tools
Accelerator (ACT-A) and the extension of its mandate into 2022, and we will advance
collaboration with global and regional initiatives, including ACT-A’s COVAX Pillar, the African
Union’s African Vaccine Acquisition Trust (AVAT), the Revolving Fund of the Pan American
Health Organization, and the Global Fund’s COVID-19 Response Mechanism. We will work to
increase transparency and predictability of deliveries of vaccines and to foster responsible
public-private partnerships. We thank the Multilateral Leaders Task Force for its e orts and
encourage it to work to identify gaps and accelerate access to and on-the-ground delivery of
COVID-19 tools. Not only will these actions help save countless lives, accelerating
vaccinations across the globe also remains the cornerstone of the economic recovery. We
call on Multilateral Development Banks working together with COVAX to continue to support
procurement and delivery of vaccines.
We remain committed to build on the lessons learned from the COVID-19 crisis to increase
investment into longer term health capacity, building up resilience to future health shocks
and addressing people’s needs by improving dialogue and coordination between global
health and finance policy-makers, multilateral health and financial institutions, and
reinforcing a multilateral approach for financing extensive immunisation as a global public
good, based on multisectoral collaboration domestically and internationally. We commit to
promote a healthy and sustainable recovery through the strengthening of national health
systems, making them more inclusive and resilient, ensuring universal access to health care
services, including sexual and reproductive health, in line with SDGs, and focusing on
primary health care to achieve quality health care at all levels and achieve Universal Health
Coverage (UHC), including the commitment on the G20 Shared Understanding on the
Importance of UHC Financing in Developing Countries.
We are determined to advance pandemic, prevention, preparedness and response, as well as
to prepare the way for stronger post-pandemic recovery, in line with the comprehensive One
Health approach, taking into account work of the Tripartite and UN Environment Programme
and their newly established One Health High Level Expert Panel, and with previous G20
commitments to tackle antimicrobial resistance.

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Joint G20 Finance and Health Ministers Meeting Communiqué | U.S. Department of the Treasury

We acknowledge that financing for PPR has to become more adequate, more sustainable
and better coordinated and requires a continuous cooperation between health and finance
decision-makers, including to address potential financing gaps, mobilising an appropriate
mix of existing multilateral financing mechanisms and explore setting up new financing
mechanisms.
In line with the Rome Declaration, we agree that our actions should be guided by the
following principles: be anchored in countries needs and contexts; foster domestic resource
mobilisation for strengthening health systems as our first line against the next pandemic;
recognise the urgent need to act collectively to address the cross-border nature of health
emergencies and focus on addressing gaps, including the gender dimension; recognise the
crucial leadership role of the WHO in the international health work; build on the respective
strengths and mandates of existing organisations and leverage existing networks of
collaboration such as ACT-A; be coherent with and supportive of ongoing e orts to
strengthen the global health architecture; strive to improve global coordination to enable
agility and flexibility, promoting equity and avoiding duplication and overlapping mandates
that could delay the response by global, regional and country-level health agencies; take
into account processes that are considering support of a possible convention, agreement or
other international instrument in the context of the WHO on pandemic preparedness and
response, and in alignment with strengthening the International Health Regulations (2005).
Based on the principles above and building on the work of the G20 Informal Group of
Finance and Health Experts, we establish a G20 Joint Finance-Health Task Force (the Task
Force) aimed at enhancing dialogue and global cooperation on issues relating to pandemic
PPR, promoting the exchange of experiences and best practices, developing coordination
arrangements between Finance and Health Ministries, promoting collective action, assessing
and addressing health emergencies with cross-border impact, and encouraging e ective
stewardship of resources for pandemic PPR, while adopting a One Health approach.
Taking into account the forthcoming discussions and decisions by the World Health
Assembly with regards to strengthening WHO preparedness and response to health
emergencies, the Task Force will develop options for coordination arrangements between
Finance and Health Ministries. The Task Force is member led and operates by consensus.
Task Force members will be Health and Finance o icials. To ensure inclusiveness,
representation, and geographical coverage, also building on the experience of the Global
Health Summit held in May 2021, it will consider the inclusion of additional non-G20
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Joint G20 Finance and Health Ministers Meeting Communiqué | U.S. Department of the Treasury

members, regional bodies and International Organizations (IOs) on a consensus basis. It
shall conduct outreach and meaningful engagement with vulnerable countries, regional
organisations, civil society, academia, and the private sector.
The Task Force is initially jointly chaired by the 2021 and 2022 G20 Presidencies. It will report
to Health and Finance Ministers in early 2022 and will be assisted by a secretariat housed at
the WHO, with the support of the World Bank. The secretariat will draw on the expertise of
the G20 membership and relevant IOs and International Financial Institutions.
We expect the Task Force to report on how health and finance collaboration can strengthen
e orts to prevent, detect, and respond to future health emergencies with cross-border
potential, within the framework of the International Health Regulations (2005). It should
discuss public and private financing already allocated for pandemic PPR, and the related
financing gaps, drawing upon the work of the G20 High Level Independent Panel and other
relevant sources, and it could identify opportunities for coordination of financing and
resource mobilisation for pandemic PPR; it should take into account relevant
legislative/legal frameworks; and identify priorities for allocation of resources.
We ask the Task Force to convene before the end of 2021 to agree on an initial roadmap and
appoint the secretariat.

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