Hailu, DegolSingh, Sonal2024-10-042024-10-042009https://repositorio.ipea.gov.br/handle/11058/15837About 33 million people currently live with HIV. The disease has reduced life expectancy by about 20 years. Nearly 12 million children are orphaned. It is now well established that the epidemic demands an immediate increase in resources. The main questions that arise are where the resources will come from, and whether they can be fully spent and absorbed. One major source of financing for HIV and AIDS control is external aid. A recent report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) computed the macroeconomic implications of scaling-up aid as promised by the G-8 at Gleneagles. The assessments for Benin, Niger and Togo indicate that scaling-up aid will put moderate to sizable pressure on inflation and exchange rates (IMF, 2008).Esta publicação defende o aumento dos gastos públicos para o combate ao HIV/AIDS nos três países africanos. Se combinado com uma micro-gestão apropriada através de uma maior coordenação, eficiência e implementação de projetos e programas inovadores, tal aumento levará a uma resposta mais eficaz e evitará a instabilidade macroeconômica.engAcesso AbertoThe Macro-Micro Nexus in Scaling-Up Aid: The Case of HIV and AIDS Control in Kenya, Malawi and ZambiaEl Nexo Macro y Microeconómico en el Aumento de la Asistencia: El Caso del Control del VIH y el SIDA en Kenia, Malaui y ZambiaO Nexo Macro-micro no Incremento da Ajuda: o caso do Controle de HIV eAIDS no Quênia, Maláui e ZâmbiaWorking paperInternational Policy Centre for Inclusive GrowthUnited Nations Development ProgrammeLicença total exclusivaO texto e dados desta publicação podem ser reproduzidos desde que as fontes sejam citadas. Reproduções com fins comerciais são proibidas.Scaling-Up AidHIVAIDSControlKenyaMalawiZambia