HIV/AIDS Monitor: Tracking Aid Effectiveness
- Read the new HIV/AIDS Monitor analysis of the newly released PEPFAR funding data
News and Highlights from the Donors
- U.S. President Bush signs PEPFAR reauthorization
- The World Bank releases a full schedule of its sponsored events at the XVII International AIDS Conference
- The World Bank organizes the 3rd Latin America & the Caribbean Technical Meeting on STD, HIV/AIDS and Disability
- The Global Fund signs a Round 7 HIV/AIDS grant for India
HIV/AIDS Monitor - Brief Description
Billions of dollars in aid are flowing to developing countries to confront HIV/AIDS but relatively little is known yet about the effectiveness of this aid. The HIV/AIDS Monitor is designed to help fill this knowledge gap by tracking and analyzing key features of the way aid for HIV/AIDS is allocated and disbursed, while identifying lessons relevant to broader questions about the effectiveness of development assistance.
The analysis centers on the three major HIV/AIDS aid initiatives: The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; The President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR); and the World Bank's Multi-Country HIV/AIDS Program (MAP). Despite a common commitment to fighting the epidemic, each donor implements programs in different ways with different targets. Based on global-level analysis and case studies from three African nations, the HIV/AIDS Monitor hopes to contribute to improvements in the efficiency and effectiveness of the major aid initiatives. For more information on the HIV/AIDS Monitor project please refer to our Concept Note.
Completed Products
- "The Numbers Behind The Stories"
- "PEPFAR Reauthorization: Improving Transparency in U.S. Funding for HIV/AIDS"
- "Following the Funding"
- "A Trickle or a Flood"
Projects in Progress
- Country-Level Studies on:
- The Relationship Between Funding and Performance
- Global-Level Studies on:
- Monitoring and Evaluation
- The Relationship Between Funding and Performance
- Background Paper assessing the ARV supply chain
- Donor Gender Policies
This initiative is funded in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the International Development Research Centre of Canada, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency.
CGD Experts
James Habyarimana, Mead Over, Nandini Oomman, Ruth Levine, Steve Radelet


