The
World Health Organization has gained prominence for its work during the COVID-19 pandemic, which has spawned endless
conspiracy theories.
A
video posted to Instagram (archived
here) has questioned the global body's independence, claiming the pharmaceutical industry provides 70 per cent of WHO's funding.
However, publicly available financial documents show the majority of WHO's funding comes from member nations and charity groups, with medicine makers contributing a tiny amount - less than one per cent.
The video is an excerpt of an
hour-long interview between Australian anti-vaccine activist
Maria Zeee and American physician Ryan Cole.
AAP FactCheck has previously
debunked Zeee's claims about COVID vaccines.
The WHO funding claim is made by Cole, who has been criticised for
spreading COVID misinformation and was
controversially appointed to an Idaho regional health board in 2021.
"Seventy per cent of its (WHO) funding comes from pharma, the rest comes from Bill Gates and China and, you know, some of the nation donors," Cole says in the video.
Financial statements published by WHO in May 2021 shows most of its funding comes from member nations.
WHO's website explains the funding is divided into two categories: assessed contributions and voluntary contributions.
Assessed contributions are mandatory annual payments from WHO's 196 member countries, calculated mainly as a proportion of a nation's gross domestic product (
GDP). These make up less than 20 per cent of WHO's funding.
Voluntary contributions provide the remaining 80 per cent. As well as WHO member nations, donations come from local and regional governments, non-government organisations (NGOs), charitable foundations and private companies.
WHO
financial documents show that out of $US3.65 billion in voluntary contributions in 2020, $US2 billion was donated by member nations and $US1.65 billion from non-members.
Pharmaceutical companies contributed $US36 million in 2020 - less than one per cent of the WHO's voluntary contributions.
The largest contribution from a pharmaceutical company was $US7.6 million from
Sanofi Pasteur, which included a $US5-million-per-year
agreement to fight neglected tropical diseases.
WHO released a
list of its top 20 contributors over 2020-21, showing Germany on top with $US1.269 billion over the biennial funding cycle. China was the 10th largest donor in 2020-21 with $US168 million, behind the United States, United Kingdom, Japan and Canada.
The largest non-nation contributors over this period were the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation with $US751 million, the
European Commission with $US466 million,
GAVI Alliance with $US432 million and
Rotary International with $US174 million.
Germany announced in June 2020 it would greatly increase its contribution to WHO funding, seeing it take top-donor status from the US, which
temporarily withdrew from the UN agency under fomer president Donald Trump.
In January 2022, a group of global leaders including former UK prime minister
Gordon Brown and former New Zealand prime minister
Helen Clark penned
an article calling for more financial independence for WHO and criticising its reliance on voluntary contributions.
The article claims the proportion of funding WHO receives from voluntary contributions has increased to more than 80 per cent, resulting in less-flexible funding and "an underfunding of both emergency preparedness and the prevention and control of
noncommunicable diseases".
The Verdict
The claim the World Health Organization receives three quarters of its funding from the pharmaceutical industry is false. Financial documents show the majority comes from member nations. Pharmaceutical companies contribute less than one per cent. The rest of the UN health agency's funding comes from other governments and charitable NGOs.
False The claim is inaccurate.
* AAP FactCheck is an accredited member of the
International Fact-Checking Network. To keep up with our latest fact checks, follow us on
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*CORRECTION 15/1/24: Correction made in paragraph 10 to change the contributions figures from trillions to billions. The percentage figures in pars 3, 11 and in The Verdict have also been changed to reflect the revised totals- from 0.001 per cent to just less than one per cent.