US set to quit World Health Organization

The U.S. is due to officially exit the World Health Organization on Thursday, in the face of warnings it will ​hit both U.S. health and global health and also in violation of a U.S. law that requires Washington to pay the U.N. health agency $260 million in fees that it owes.

The U.S. is due to officially exit the World Health Organization on Thursday, in the face of warnings it will ​hit both U.S. health and global health and also in violation of a U.S. law that requires Washington to pay the U.N. health agency $260 million in fees that it owes. (Denis Balibouse, Reuters )


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The U.S. is set to exit the WHO Thursday, violating a U.S. law.
  • The departure risks U.S. and global health, sparking a WHO budget crisis.
  • Experts urge the U.S. to reconsider, but a quick return seems unlikely.

LONDON — The U.S. is due to officially exit the World Health Organization on Thursday, in the face of warnings it will ​hit both U.S. health and global health and also in violation of a U.S. law that requires Washington to pay the U.N. health agency $260 million in fees that it owes.

President Donald Trump gave notice that the U.S. would quit the organization ⁠on the first day of his presidency in 2025, via an executive order. Under U.S. law, it has to give one-year notice and pay all outstanding fees before departure.

On ‌Thursday, a State Department spokesperson said the WHO's failure to contain, manage and share information had cost the U.S. trillions of ⁠dollars and the president had exercised his authority to pause the future transfer of any U.S. government funds, support, or resources to ‌the WHO.

"The American people have paid ‍more than enough to this organization and this economic hit is beyond a down payment on any financial obligations ⁠to the organization," the spokesperson said by email.

Quick return unlikely

Over the last year, many ⁠global health experts have urged a rethink, including most recently WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

"I hope the U.S. will reconsider and rejoin WHO," he told reporters at a press conference earlier this month. "Withdrawing from the WHO is a loss for the United States, and it's a loss for the rest of the world."

The WHO also said that the U.S. has not yet paid the fees it owes for 2024 and 2025. Member states are set to discuss the U.S. departure and how it will be handled at the WHO's executive board in February, a WHO spokesperson told Reuters by ‍email.

"This is a clear violation of U.S. law," said Lawrence Gostin, founding director of the O'Neill Institute for Global Health Law at Georgetown University in Washington, a close observer of the WHO. "But Trump is highly likely to get away with it."

Speaking to Reuters at Davos, Bill Gates, chair of the Gates Foundation, a major funder of global health initiatives and some of the WHO's work, said he did not expect the U.S. to reconsider in the short term.

"I don't think the U.S. will be coming back to WHO in the near future," he said, adding that when he had an opportunity to advocate for it, he would. "The world needs ‌the World Health Organization."

What the departure means

For the WHO, the departure of the U.S. has sparked a budgetary crisis that has seen it cut its management team in half and scale ‌back work, cutting budgets across the agency. Washington has traditionally been by far the U.N. health agency's biggest financial backer, contributing around 18% of its overall funding. The WHO will also shed around a quarter of its staff by the middle of this year.

The agency said it has been working with the U.S. and sharing information in the last year. It was unclear how the collaboration would work going forward.

Global health experts said this posed risks for ⁠the U.S., the WHO and the ​world.

"The U.S. withdrawal from WHO could weaken the systems and collaborations the world ⁠relies on to detect, prevent, and respond ‌to health threats," said Kelly Henning, public health program lead at Bloomberg Philanthropies, a U.S.-based non-profit.

Contributing: Jeffrey Dastin

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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