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Friday, June 19, 2026
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“Health Works” Initiative – It Does Not.


The Health Record  ·  Spring Meetings 2026  ·  MDB Reform Platform

“Health Works” is the Bank’s flagship health initiative — 1.5 billion people reached with quality, affordable health services by 2030. The Bank’s promotional material cites Mozambique as a success story. IEG’s evaluation of the same portfolio: two projects, $150 million, zero Satisfactory. The gap between the marketing and the evaluation is the accountability problem this paper documents.

The 55-Point Gap — The Largest Benchmark Divergence of Any Sector in Africa

The World Bank reports health portfolio performance using the MS+ benchmark — Moderately Satisfactory or above. In the Africa HNP portfolio, that produces a headline rate of 84.6 percent. Using the S+ benchmark — the standard the Bank applies to IFC and MIGA — the rate by commitment is 29.2 percent.

The gap is 55 percentage points — the largest benchmark divergence of any sector in the Africa portfolio, exceeding education (41pp) and transport (44pp). The health portfolio is where the MS+ metric does the most damage to accountability. It is also where Health Works is built on that reported number rather than the honest one.

Summary

The World Bank committed $8.4 billion to 78 IEG-rated HNP projects in Sub-Saharan Africa between FY2015 and FY2026. $5.9 billion — 71 percent — went to projects that did not achieve Satisfactory outcomes. By project count: 34.6% S+. By commitment: 29.2% — 29 cents on the dollar. The headline MS+ rate is 84.6 percent, producing a 55-point gap between what is reported and the honest benchmark.

Fourteen countries have two or more evaluated health projects and zero Satisfactory outcomes: 55 projects, $3.0 billion committed. The instrument test is the most important structural finding: MTI failed via DPF, Health fails via IPF. Same countries, same outcome, different instruments. The problem is not the instrument. The Global Fund’s own OIG confirms: both institutions fail in Angola, DRC, and Congo-Brazzaville; the focused Global Fund model succeeds in Kenya while the Bank’s does not. The floor determines what is possible. The delivery model determines the ceiling above it.

29¢on the dollar. Commitment-weighted S+ rate: 29.2% of $8.4bn. The Bank reports 84.6% using MS+.
55ppThe gap between 84.6% (MS+) and 29.2% (S+ by commitment). Largest benchmark divergence of any sector in Africa.
$3.0bn14 Zero Club countries, 55 projects, zero Satisfactory. 20% of all Africa Health commitment. Every dollar repaid.
$1.3bnTanzania: largest single health commitment in Africa. Zero Satisfactory. The Basic Health Services Project ($1.062bn, MU) is the largest single health project failure on the continent.
📄
Full Paper (PDF) — The Health RecordSpring Meetings sector data. Country tables. The Health Works contradiction. The MS+ gap in full. IEG 2018 evaluation findings. Five operational recommendations.

↓  Download Full Paper (PDF)

📄
Zero Club Health Paper — 40-Page Full Analysis (PDF)14-country profiles. Kenya 36-year record. HCI trend analysis. Global Fund OIG cross-institutional test. Six failure modes. DRC $715M and Cameroon $163M deep dives. MS equilibrium. Missing counterfactual.

↓  Download Zero Club Paper (PDF)

Finding 1: The 55-Point Gap — and the Health Works Contradiction

Health Works commits the Bank to reaching 1.5 billion people with quality, affordable health services by 2030. It is backed by a $27 billion global portfolio, 160 projects, 15 National Health Compacts launched in Tokyo in December 2025, $2 billion in co-financing with the Global Fund and Gavi, and $410 million in philanthropic mobilisation. The Bank reports 375 million people already reached.

S+ Rate
29%
Honest benchmark
MS-only zone — reported as success
55pp gap
Below MS
15%
THE MOZAMBIQUE CONTRADICTION: The Bank’s Health Works promotional material cites Mozambique as a success: community health workers doubled from 3,380 to 8,300; household access rose from 1.7 million to 3.6 million. These are real access gains. Mozambique’s IEG health record: 2 projects, $150 million committed, zero Satisfactory. Access improved. Quality did not. IEG’s 2018 evaluation found access improved in 70% of evaluated projects; quality improved in only 46%. The Bank can get people to clinics. It cannot ensure that what happens inside is adequate.
THE 55-POINT FINDING: Health is where the MS+ metric does the most damage to accountability. 84.6% of projects are rated MS+ — the highest in the Africa portfolio. 29.2% by commitment are rated S+. Health Works is built on the first number. The IEG evidence base for the initiative documents the second. The 15 National Health Compacts commit to quality, not just access. The evaluation architecture must be redesigned to hold operations to that standard.

Finding 2: Tanzania — $1.3 Billion, Zero Satisfactory

Tanzania is the single largest health commitment in Sub-Saharan Africa — $1.3 billion — and has zero Satisfactory outcomes. The Basic Health Services Project ($1.062 billion, rated Moderately Unsatisfactory) is the largest single health project failure in Africa. The successor project improved to Moderately Satisfactory but did not reach the Satisfactory threshold. Tanzania will repay both loans in full.

Tanzania Basic Health Services (P099974)

Committed: $1.062bn  |  Rating: MU
Largest single health project failure in Africa. Facilities built; quality of care not delivered.

Tanzania Health System Strengthening

Committed: ~$250M  |  Rating: MS
Successor project improved from MU. Did not reach S+. Combined: $1.3bn, 0% Satisfactory.

Finding 3: The Instrument Test — IPF Fails Too

The MTI Zero Club (Part 9) documented 14 countries where Development Policy Financing never achieved Satisfactory health or governance outcomes. The rebuttal: DPF rewards legal compliance over functional change. Investment lending is different — IPFs have procurement, results frameworks, supervision missions, and implementation units.

The Health Zero Club tests this directly. In 14 African countries, 55 health IPFs over up to 36 years produced zero Satisfactory outcomes.

THE INSTRUMENT FINDING: MTI failed through DPFs. Health fails through IPFs. Same countries. Same outcome. The problem is not the instrument. It is the interaction between project design, implementation discipline, and institutional capacity — which neither instrument resolves when those preconditions are absent. DPF in health: zero Satisfactory on $300 million (IEG 2018). IPF in health: zero Satisfactory in 14 countries across 55 projects.

What the IEG 2018 evaluation already confirmed

Access improved in 70% of projects; quality improved in only 46%. Health systems strengthening objectives fell from 42% of closed projects to 27% of open ones — the Bank was retreating from the hard institutional work. Health was the second-most-vulnerable sector to corruption: 191 Integrity VP cases. The 2009 IEG evaluation documented this pattern. The 2018 evaluation confirmed it. The design model has not changed.

Finding 4: Kenya — 36 Years, $694 Million, Never Once Satisfactory

Kenya is not a fragile state. It is lower-middle income, has functioning institutions, a large private health sector, and a Ministry of Health coordinating Global Fund, Gavi, PEPFAR, and bilateral programmes simultaneously. Eight IEG-evaluated health projects. $694 million. 36 years. Not one rated Satisfactory.

P-CodeProjectYearRatingCommitted
P001312Population IVFY1990U$36M
P001339Health RehabilitationFY1992MU$31M
P001333Sexually Transmitted InfectionsFY1995MS$52M
P066486Decentralised Reproductive HealthFY2001U$98M
P070920HIV/AIDS Disaster ResponseFY2001MU$50M
P081712Total War Against HIV/AIDS (TOWA)FY2007MS$135M
P074091Health Sector SupportFY2010MS$100M
P152394Transforming Health SystemsFY2016MS$191M
Eight projects. $694 million. 36 years. A non-fragile, lower-middle-income country with functioning institutions. The Bank’s evaluation system never rated a single Kenya health project Satisfactory. Commitment grew from $36 million in 1990 to $191 million in 2016. The diagnosis grew more sophisticated. The results did not improve.

Finding 5: The Zero Club — 14 Countries, Zero Satisfactory

CountryProjectsCommittedContext
DRC7$982MFragile. In five Zero Clubs simultaneously (Health, MTI, Transport, Energy, Education).
Kenya8$694MNon-fragile, stable. 36 years. The instrument-agnostic finding confirmed here.
Burkina Faso4$270MLower-middle income. PBF collapse the primary failure mode.
Cameroon5$253MNon-fragile. Also in Education Zero Club. PBF could not outperform unconditional transfers.
Angola3$131MLower-middle income. Global Fund also struggled. The floor has not been reached.
Congo-Brazzaville3$89MLower-middle income. Global Fund OIG: limited progress in 10 years.
CAR2$81MFragile. External implementation the minimum viable delivery model.
Sierra Leone3$36MPost-conflict. Three IPFs evaluated.
Lesotho2$21MDevolution without institutional readiness the primary failure mode.
Eritrea2$32MRestricted access. Limited supervision possible.
Rwanda2$27MExited Zero Club on subsequent projects. Exit is possible.
Comoros2$21MSmall island. HCI declined (-0.004).
Guinea-Bissau2$16MFragile. Post-conflict.
São Tomé1$11MSmall island. Institutional capacity the binding constraint.

Finding 6: The HCI Test — The Bank’s Own Metric

The Bank’s Human Capital Index — combining child survival, adult survival, stunting, and education — provides the independent test. If $3 billion in health lending produced transformational results, they should appear here.

CountryHCI baselineHCI 2020ChangeWB Health Commitment
DRC0.369 (2017)0.366−0.003$982M
Angola0.361 (2017)0.362−0.001$131M
Comoros0.409 (2017)0.405−0.004$21M
Cameroon0.394 (2017)0.397+0.018$253M
Burkina Faso0.320 (2010)0.384+0.064$270M
SSA average (16 countries)+0.041

Cameroon gained only +0.018 on $253M — less than half the SSA average. DRC, Angola, and Comoros declined. Burkina Faso gained +0.064 on $270M but tracking the SSA average, not outperforming it. The Bank can get people to clinics. It cannot ensure adequate care inside.

Finding 7: Six Failure Modes

Failure ModeCountriesIEG language (own evaluation)
Overly ambitious designCameroon, DRC, Angola“Overly complex and risky projects are unwise to embark upon, even in the presence of political pressure.” (Cameroon, FY1995, HU)
PBF scaled before evidenceCameroon, BF, Congo-B, CAR“Scaling up too quickly can limit the ability to adopt previous learning.” (Cameroon, FY2016, U)
M&E without measurementKenya, Cameroon, BF“Data availability is critical to ensure adequate monitoring.” (Kenya, FY2016, MS)
Devolution without capacityKenya, Lesotho“Staffing in the PMT was not sufficient to support and supervise 47 counties.” (Kenya, FY2016, MS)
Post-conflict state absenceDRC, CAR, Sierra Leone“The absence of a TTL on the ground can critically affect a project’s ability.” (DRC, FY2004, U)
Staff turnover + amnesiaCameroon, DRC, Kenya“Frequent team changes, resulting in significant loss of expertise and continuity.” (Cameroon, FY2016, U)

Finding 8: Two ICRR Deep Dives

DRC  ·  P147555  ·  $715 Million  ·  Moderately Satisfactory
The largest health investment project in Africa — the MS equilibrium at $715 million

Approved at $220M in 2014, grew through five additional financings to $715M. Real gains: ANC visits 36%→65%; immunisation 62%→71%; contraceptive prevalence 6%→27%.

The M&E baseline was the 1984 census — 30 years before the project started. Targets were lowered in 2020; the project rated Substantial against reduced targets but only Modest against originals. Fraud: “High levels of corruption in the province of Equator” — province eventually removed. $906,345 in ineligible expenses. Efficiency: Modest. PBF administrative costs: 26% of PBF spending.

Fraud, a province removed for corruption, a 1984 census baseline, dropped components, lowered targets — absorbed into a single word: Moderately Satisfactory. This is the MS equilibrium at $715 million.

Cameroon  ·  P156679  ·  $163 Million  ·  Unsatisfactory  ·  Efficiency: Negligible
Scaling without learning — and a PBF impact evaluation that found no advantage over unconditional transfers

Previous project: PBF in 44 districts. This project: 194 districts simultaneously, plus refugee services, emergency component, GFF investment case — all at once.

The project’s own impact evaluation (De Walque et al., 2021): “outcome differences between the PBF treatment group and the increased financing group were not statistically significant.” The Bank’s preferred health financing instrument could not demonstrate it outperformed unconditional transfers in the same context.

$30M (nearly 20% of expenditure) spent verifying PBF payments. Refugee component: $30M approved, “no data reported and no activities were carried out” — full $30M cancelled. No PDO indicators reported November 2019–June 2022: nearly three years of a $163M project with zero results data. Cameroon will repay in full.

Finding 9: The Global Fund Cross-Institutional Test

Angola  ·  OIG 2020  ·  Both institutions fail
“Global Fund grants in Angola are performing poorly. HIV deaths +29%, TB cases +19%, malaria +48% since 2010. Systemic issues that will not be addressed with short-sighted tactical fixes.” GF: $300M. Bank: $131M. Neither produced intended outcomes. The floor has not been reached.
DRC  ·  OIG 2016, 2019  ·  Both institutions fail
Supply chain: Ineffective. Financial management: Needs Significant Improvement. $25.3M non-compliant from a $77.5M sample. GF: $2 billion since 2003. Bank: $982M. Both at scale. Neither at performance threshold.
Congo-Brazzaville  ·  OIG 2022  ·  Both institutions fail
“In the past 10 years, little progress has been made fighting the three diseases — limited national government support and limited scope of Global Fund grants.” Both doubled allocations. Neither changed the trajectory.
Kenya  ·  OIG 2015, 2022  ·  Global Fund succeeds; Bank does not
Global Fund: “generally effective” (2015); “performing reasonably well” (2022). HIV prevalence 10.5%→6.0%. Bank: $694M, never Satisfactory. Focused disease-specific model worked. Broad health systems model did not.
THE FLOOR-CEILING FINDING: In Angola, DRC, and Congo-Brazzaville, both institutions struggle — the institutional floor has not been reached. In Kenya, the GF’s focused disease-specific model produces results; the Bank’s broader systems model does not. Institutional environment determines the floor. Delivery model determines the ceiling above the floor. The Bank’s health IPF model operates as though the floor has been reached — in half the Zero Club, it has not.

Finding 10: The Moderately Satisfactory Equilibrium

The modal rating across 55 Zero Club projects is not Unsatisfactory. It is Moderately Satisfactory.

MS   53%
MU   31%
U   13%
HU

MS is not failure. It is not success. It is the equilibrium: enough delivery to avoid an Unsatisfactory rating, enough disbursement to sustain the pipeline, insufficient achievement for transformation — but institutionally acceptable. A project rated MS triggers no lending pause, no portfolio review, no mandatory design revision. The next project is prepared. Commitment grows. The lessons are identified, documented, and repeated. The design model does not change.

THE MISSING COUNTERFACTUAL: What would happen if countries with three consecutive below-Satisfactory health projects automatically triggered an independent portfolio review before another could be approved? The Bank has no such mechanism. IEG documents the lessons. Management acknowledges them. The next project is prepared. The counterfactual — a system connecting outcome performance to lending authority — has never been tested because no institutional actor has an incentive to propose it.

Where Health Works — and Why

CountryS+ RateCommittedWhat made the difference
South Sudan67.9%$248MExternal implementation via UN/NGO partners. Bounded, measurable objectives. Not dependent on Ministry systems for delivery.
Guinea62.6%$151MDisease-specific focus: malaria, Ebola. Bounded operational endpoints with clear success criteria.
Mali61.0%$245MNarrow nutrition objectives with measurable anthropometric targets. Accountability for specific, quantifiable outcomes.
Ethiopia50.1%$320MExisting Health Extension Programme as the platform. Bank built on a functioning system rather than creating one from scratch.
RwandaEscaped ZCStrong state discipline. Imihigo performance contracts. Community accountability. Integrated PBF within a functioning state — not as a substitute for one.

✔  What the successes share

Focused, specific, measurable health objectives. External or strong national platforms as the delivery vehicle. Bounded scope matched to institutional capacity. Disease endpoints rather than systems reform as the primary goal. Functioning accountability mechanisms.

✘  What the Zero Club countries share

Broad health systems strengthening requiring institutional transformation as a precondition. PBF at scale without demonstrated context-specific effectiveness. MS+ absorbs partial achievement. Lessons repeated without design change. Floor below which no model reliably works.


The Bottom Line

$8.4 billion committed to Health in Sub-Saharan Africa. 84.6% reported successful. 29.2% by the honest benchmark. 55 points between those two numbers — the largest benchmark gap of any sector in Africa. Health Works is built on the first number. IEG’s evaluation record documents the second. The Mozambique success story cites doubled community health workers. IEG rates the same portfolio: zero Satisfactory.

The instrument test removes the most common defence: IPF and DPF fail in the same 14 countries. The Global Fund’s own OIG confirms both institutions struggle where the institutional floor has not been reached — Angola, DRC, Congo-Brazzaville — while focused models succeed where it has (Kenya). The Moderately Satisfactory equilibrium — 53% of Zero Club ratings — is the mechanism that makes $715 million in DRC, $163 million in Cameroon, and $694 million in Kenya all institutionally acceptable without triggering a portfolio review. Health Works promises to be different. The 15 National Health Compacts are the test. Each one should carry an annex: what does the IEG record show for this country, what failure modes were documented, and what specifically will be different this time.

📄
Zero Club Health Paper — 40 Pages, Full Analysis14-country profiles. Kenya 36-year table. HCI trend data. GF OIG cross-institutional test. Six failure modes from 55 IEG lesson texts. DRC $715M and Cameroon $163M deep dives. MS equilibrium diagram. Missing counterfactual. 20-country total including six-country addendum.

↓  Download Zero Club Paper (PDF)

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