The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has announced a new $1.6 billion commitment to Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, aiming to sustain the delivery of life-saving vaccines to children in the world’s most vulnerable communities over the next five years. This renewed pledge comes amid growing concerns that years of global health progress are at risk due to shrinking foreign aid budgets and shifting donor priorities.
In a statement posted on the foundation’s official website, the Gates Foundation emphasized the urgency of continued support for immunization programs, especially as international development budgets face cuts. “Foreign assistance has plummeted this year after years of stagnation,” the foundation noted, warning that without urgent action, the number of children dying from preventable diseases could rise for the first time in decades.
“This is a tragedy,” said Bill Gates, chair of the Gates Foundation. “Fully funding Gavi is the single most powerful step we can take to stop it. The legacy of our generation cannot be that we looked away as millions of poor children died of preventable causes.”
Gavi plays a central role in the global health architecture, delivering vaccines for diseases like measles, polio, and HPV in low-income countries. Since its creation in 2000, the alliance has helped vaccinate over a billion children, preventing an estimated 17 million deaths.
The Gates Foundation’s renewed commitment seeks to reinforce this momentum and prevent backsliding in child survival rates. It also aligns with the foundation’s broader strategy to improve public health outcomes globally through targeted, high-impact investments.
Looking ahead, the foundation says it will focus on three major goals during this new funding phase: ending preventable deaths of mothers and babies, stopping the spread of deadly infectious diseases in the next generation, and lifting millions out of poverty by expanding access to health, education, and financial opportunities.
Beyond global health, the foundation is also investing in digital public infrastructure, artificial intelligence for development, and pathways for U.S. students. Its gender equality efforts aim to ensure more women and girls have access to education, healthcare, and financial tools that can help them break cycles of poverty.
With international aid in decline and multiple crises straining global systems, the Gates Foundation’s backing of Gavi underscores a call to action for other global partners to maintain support for life-saving initiatives in the world’s poorest regions.