Introduction
My first paper on philanthrocapitalism and planetary health
has recently been published (abstract below), and I am now working on an
offshoot, mainly about the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) and its
approach to malaria, polio and Ebola, aiming for the Journal of the Royal
Society of Medicine. This evolving paper will also discuss complexity
theory and how the focus of the Gates Foundation on "vertical" health
programmes may be necessary but is far from sufficient. This paper will be
adapted from a section of about 1,500 words, cut from the original paper, which
is pretty long, even without it.
Most of the section below (A-E) was also cut from the published
paper, mainly because one of the journal's anonymous reviewers took offense to
it (and much else!) It has today been modified with two endnotes.
My own encounters with philanthrocapitalism
I have had several encounters (or near-encounters) with
philanthrocapitalism, especially the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, its
richest and most powerful variant.
A. In 2015 I attended the World Congress of Public Health, held in
India, a “developing” country. The keynote speaker in the opening session was
an economist, employed by the BMGF national office. I remember being frustrated
by the speaker’s conventional, non-ecological approach; a feeling that set the
tone for a disappointing meeting. I recall reflecting that the speaker’s
prominence was unsurprising, given the extent to which the BMGF had
underwritten the meeting. But I did not then know that, in 2005, Bill Gates had
been a keynote speaker at the 58th World Health Assembly, the annual
showcase of the World Health Organization (WHO). Gates’ invitation, an
unprecedented honor for a non-head of state, had, soon after, prompted the
Peoples’ Health Movement to call for the Microsoft Corporation be declared an honorary ‘member
country’ of WHO. See endnotes (1) and (2).
B. Someone I know was contracted by the BMGF to work in China. A
condition of their employment was a clause preventing publication of any data
conflicting with that officially approved by the Chinese government.
C. A malariologist I know recently wrote to me to the effect that
much of what he (and I) were taught by professors of malariology is now
disregarded, though not due to improved evidence.
D. Earlier, I collaborated on a paper indirectly critical of the
BMGF’s claim to be able to eradicate malaria. The paper was eventually
withdrawn, in order to not place at risk the funding of an institution which
one of my co-authors was then directing.
E. The BMGF also funds thinktanks, including the International
Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). In 2005 I was an invited speaker to an
IFPRI meeting. My subsequent paper was rejected, without external review. I
thought then that the probable reason, though unstated, was that my paper was
too critical of neoliberalism (market preferring solutions).
---
My paper is also critical of the Wellcome Trust, mainly for its
investment in tax havens and for its view that it is acceptable to invest in
fossil fuels (see for example, which states in part:
"In 2015 more than 1000 doctors
and other health professionals signed a letter calling on the Wellcome Trust to
stop investing in shares in coal, oil, and gas, but it refused. The charity has
a massive investment portfolio which was then worth £18bn. The letter argued
that not divesting legitimised an industry that had made no pledges to act on
climate change.
A
Wellcome spokesperson said, “The range of individuals and organisations working
to improve human health is wide, and it would be surprising if this community
did not contain a diversity of opinion about how best to reduce carbon
emissions. The Wellcome Trust believes that engagement with the small number of
energy companies in which we invest gives us the best opportunity to contribute
to change, but we understand and respect the views of those who disagree.”
Points F and G were not in the original draft:
F. I have been involved in two Wellcome Trust grant applications,
one of which I led, and one job application. My personal experience with the
Wellcome Trust has always been positive. Apart from its investment policy I
still have great admiration for their achievements, and unlike the BMGF they
have at least partly awoken to the risk to global health from failing
"planetary health."
G. I have never applied to the Gates Foundation for funds, but
will send them my paper, and an exploratory letter, on behalf of Health-Earth.
ABSTRACT:
Focusing on the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation (BMGF) as a case study, this paper explores the relationship between
philanthrocapitalism, economic history, and global and planetary health. The
Wellcome Trust is also briefly discussed, chiefly in the context of planetary
health. The paper argues that in the last 45 years there has been an increased
preference for market-based approaches, often called neoliberalism, particularly
in the U.S. and its allies. This has generated greater inequality in many
high-income settings and weakened the norm of taxation. This has provided a
setting in which philanthrocapitalism has flourished, including the BMGF. The
latter has in turn become an important actor for global health, partially
balancing the adverse consequences of neoliberalism. Planetary health is here
defined as the interaction between global health and global environmental
change, including to the climate and other elements of the Earth System.
Although the Wellcome Trust has recently made funds available for ecological
health research, it continues to invest in fossil fuels. The Gates Foundation
provide no or minimal grants for ecological or planetary health but appear to
have recently substantially divested from fossil fuels, for unclear reasons.
The paper concludes that these large philanthrocapitalist organizations partly
compensate for the decline in attention to global health driven by
market-preferring solutions, but remain insufficiently proactive in the face of
the great dangers associated with declining planetary health.
1. The original link to this
(http://archive.phmovement.org/en/node/72) is currently invalid, but it is
cited in Gavin Mooney's book "The Health of Nations: Towards a New
Political Economy" (Zed Books, 2012).
2. A press statement by the Peoples' Health Movement
in 2014 complained not only that Bill Gates had been invited to address WHO in
2005, but that this high honour was extended to he or his wife twice more. It
reads, in part, "It is unacceptable that the WHO, supposedly governed by
sovereign nation states, should countenance that at its annual global
conference, the keynote address would be delivered thrice in ten years by
individuals from the same private organization, and from the same family.
The BMGF is the second largest funder of the WHO. It has come to occupy this place over the past two decades, because of the freeze on assessed contributions by member states. Currently, 80% of WHO’s finances come from voluntary contributions (including from countries and from private sources) and BMGF’s funding is ‘tied’ to projects that the foundation has an interest in funding.
BMGF’s munificence towards the WHO as well as towards many other global health causes is well known. Less well known is the Foundation’s investment policies that are clearly in conflict with global health."
The BMGF is the second largest funder of the WHO. It has come to occupy this place over the past two decades, because of the freeze on assessed contributions by member states. Currently, 80% of WHO’s finances come from voluntary contributions (including from countries and from private sources) and BMGF’s funding is ‘tied’ to projects that the foundation has an interest in funding.
BMGF’s munificence towards the WHO as well as towards many other global health causes is well known. Less well known is the Foundation’s investment policies that are clearly in conflict with global health."
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