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2/17/2022

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the G20 Meeting: High-Level Seminar on Strengthening Global…

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the G20
Meeting: High-Level Seminar on Strengthening Global Health
Architecture
February 17, 2022

As prepared for delivery
Thank you to our Indonesian hosts for arranging this seminar to advance our joint e orts to
strengthen the global health architecture. We all are aware of the terrible human and
economic toll that the pandemic has wrought. And we are not yet on the other side of this
pandemic.
The pandemic has demonstrated that we must work collectively to address health threats, or
no country will be safe. The fates of our people—and economies—are intertwined.
We have also now clearly seen that public health is a critical pillar of the economy. We may
have taken this for granted as life expectancies rose and medical advances were made over
the past decades. But the pandemic reduced life expectancy for many countries across the
globe, and in some—like my own—for the first time since World War II. We must move
forward to build a stronger global health architecture.
We have work to do to both complete the current recovery and invest in the resilience of the
global health infrastructure. Doing so will set the global economy on a path toward more
enduring growth and prosperity and will have us better prepared for the next health shock.
Our most immediate goal is to complete what we have already started: we must end this
pandemic as a matter of utmost urgency. We must and can ensure that every country has the
access, the means, and the capacity to vaccinate their populations.
We need strong coordination among national governments, multilateral institutions, and
bilateral partners so that vaccine supplies quickly get to where they are needed and, once
they are there, that the capabilities and resources are in place to get vaccines into arms.
The Multilateral Leaders Task Force has a critical role here. The Task Force has compiled data
on vaccination gaps. This is helpful, but only a first step. Now we need to fill the gaps
identified by the data as well as identify and overcome the obstacles to doing so. The Task
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the G20 Meeting: High-Level Seminar on Strengthening Global…

Force should articulate clear and actionable steps to improve vaccine deployment so that all
partners—national governments, multilateral institutions, and bilateral agencies—know what
they need to do to quickly turn vaccines into vaccinations.
In this regard, we ask the Task Force to deliver a report to health and finance ministers that
provides a detailed, country-by-country assessment of the work done so far by all to advance
both vaccine supply and vaccination. The report should identify successes, challenges, and
proposed remedies to those challenges to meet vaccination targets. We welcome the World
Bankʼs agreement to convene a High‑Level Meeting on Vaccine Deployment during the Spring
Meetings, so that we advance this initiative with more clarity about the next required actions.
While vaccines are the focus, the COVID response is also about increasing the availability of
diagnostics, therapeutics, and personal protective equipment.
The international community has stepped up to address COVID-19. The United States is the
largest contributor to ACT‑A, providing more than $6 billion in financing—and hundreds of
millions of vaccine donations. But our collective e orts have not been enough. We urge all
G20 partners to contribute to this collective e ort to end the pandemic.
Beyond the immediate response, we must come together to make sure we are much better
prepared next time. We know that this will not be the last pandemic. We must act urgently to
strengthen the global health architecture so that we have the tools to prevent, prepare for,
and respond to future health crises.
To be better prepared, we need to create a forum for strong health and finance collaboration,
which was missing before COVID-19. The G20 Finance‑Health Task Force is a good starting
point to explore more systematic and formal cooperation.
Through this forum, finance and health ministries from around the world can come together
to discuss issues related to pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response. This will be
critical in detecting and containing the next deadly pathogen, so that it doesnʼt spread to
become a regional or global pandemic, devastating our people and our economies. This forum
will also better synchronize health policy prioritization and finance decisions, yielding much
greater results than our e orts before COVID‑19. It will also bring in voices from regional
groups to incorporate diverse and o en underrepresented perspectives to the global
conversation.
I look forward to the Finance-Health Task Force bringing forward concrete recommendations
later this year.
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the G20 Meeting: High-Level Seminar on Strengthening Global…

To complement our stronger coordination, we must also focus on mobilizing the funding
needed to address gaps in the system. We have existing tools, and the World Bank and WHO
will soon report to the G20 on the financing gaps in the current health architecture. But
experts have already been loud and clear that gaps exist, and that the financing needs are
undeniable. Estimates of the need run to $75 billion over the next five years. However, this is
far less than the economic cost of the current pandemic.
We support strengthening existing initiatives, like those of the multilateral development
banks, and the creation of the new IMF Resilience and Sustainability Trust. But these
initiatives are not suited to all situations, and critical gaps will remain.
This is why we urge the development of a financial intermediary fund hosted at the World
Bank.
Last year, the G20 High Level Independent Panel recommended this type of fund to channel
the large amount of investment needed to reduce global vulnerabilities to future pandemics. I
know some have reservations about this proposal, so let me describe how I see it coming
together.
First, the purpose of the Fund is to make immediate investments to prevent and prepare for
future health crises. We donʼt see this as a pool of money that sits idly waiting to respond to
the next pandemic. Rather, it will be used in the near term to incentivize countries to make
investments to fill existing gaps in their ability—and our collective capacity—to prevent and
prepare for the next crisis, as part of overall health system strengthening. For example, the
Fund could help countries invest in disease detection and surveillance systems, research
laboratories, or strengthen their healthcare workforces.
Second, the Fund will not create a new multilateral organization that attempts to execute
projects independently. Instead, it will be a new financing tool to flexibly channel and
incentivize funding for investments in pandemic preparedness at the country, regional, and
global levels through existing health and financial institutions.
For example, the Fund may channel funds through World Bank or WHO projects that are
specifically geared toward pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response e orts.
In this way, the Fund will complement and support the role of the WHO—rather than further
fragment the landscape.
The Fundʼs flexibility will also allow the possibility of mobilizing resources from nongovernment sources for pandemic preparedness beyond what the current architecture
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supports.
And finally, I want to make clear that the Fund should be designed to be additional; it should
not draw resources away from separate e orts to strengthen the WHO. We agree with other
G20 members that we must commit the necessary resources to strengthen the WHO and the
existing global health institutions.
It is our job now to identify significant financing to address the gaps in the current system—
we are finance ministers a er all. The World Bankʼs gaps analysis and work of the FinanceHealth Task Force can help inform the prioritization of investments that the Fund will
eventually make. And we should begin our work now to set up this Fund so that it is ready to
go as soon as possible.
I urge all G20 members to join in the e ort to develop this financial intermediary fund in the
coming months. While contributions will be voluntary, those that are able to do so should
step up to finance these investments in our global health security.
While the human and economic trauma of the pandemic is fresh in our minds, we have a
political window to act to address the deficiencies in our global health architecture, made all
too apparent by the current crisis. We all share this interest, and the cost of not doing so
could be devastating.
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