
Contents
Part front matter for Part II The Global Response to HIV/AIDS
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Published:June 2016
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The global response to HIV/AIDS has been motivated by perceptions not only about the health impacts of HIV/AIDS, but also by concerns about its economic and social consequences. In turn, the response to HIV/AIDS has shaped the consequences of the epidemic, and many of the economic issues addressed in this book are in part a consequence of policies pursued over the last decades. The global response to HIV/AIDS also poses a number of economic questions in its own right. It has evolved into a major aspect of global development assistance. Looking back, and looking ahead in terms of the sustained funding of the HIV/AIDS response, it is important to assess the ‘returns to investment’ and the rationality of observed global spending patterns. Do the outcomes of the global HIV/AIDS response justify its costs? And is the observed global pattern of HIV/AIDS funding rational, taking into consideration the burden of disease and the capability of countries to fund an effective HIV/AIDS response?
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