The Role of the Private Sector in the Global Health Agenda
Health investments are a fundamental element for the growth of low-and middle-income countries (LMICs) and attract a significant amount of resources within the overall development cooperation agenda. High-GDP states are the main financiers in this field. However, the for-profit private sector also provides a substantial contribution that complements public efforts. Companies – not only those directly linked to the healthcare domain – allocate funds and share know-how with various players in the healthcare sector of LMICs. While following a humanitarian logic, they safeguard their economic interests, by ensuring, for example, the stability of regions in which they operate and invest. In this regard, public-private partnerships are useful for both sides and in fact appear essential in order to achieve Sustainable Development Goal 3 (“Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages”) of the 2030 United Nations Agenda.
Paper presented at the conference “Il ruolo del settore privato nella salute globale [6]”, Rome, 3 April 2025.

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Details
Rome, IAI, April 2025, 19 p. -
In:
Documenti IAI [2] -
Issue
25|04
Introduction
1. Global health and the private sector
1.1 The role of the private sector for the SDGs
1.2 Healthcare and the private sector engagement
1.3 The role of the private sector in health systems
1.4 Impact of private health investments
2. The Global Fund and the private sector
2.1 Coca-Cola and the Last Mile Project
2.2 The partnership with Roche and Siemens Healthineers
3. The Italian private sector perspective
3.1 Reasons to invest in health and well-being
3.2 Risks and challenges
3.3 The Mattei Plan and the new international scenario
Conclusion
References