
Global Health Funding Awards by State and Congressional District
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Diverging Reports Breakdown
Global Health Funding Awards by State and Congressional District
Data were obtained from USAspending.gov, the official source of spending across the U.S. government. Funding was provided to organizations in 45 states and the District of Columbia. The top 10 states accounted for $4.5 billion, or 97%. D.C. received the largest amount of funding ($2 billion), followed by Maryland ($661 million), North Carolina ($555 million), Virginia ($386 million), Massachusetts ($294 million), New York ($283 million), Washington ($217 million), Georgia ($61 million), Tennessee ($43 million)
Some key take-aways are as follows:
In FY 2024, the U.S. obligated more than $10 billion for global health activities.
Most of this funding (75% or $7.9 billion) was designated for work primarily to be performed in other countries, whether or not the prime awardee was a U.S. or foreign implementer.
U.S.-based prime awardees received $4.6 billion (44%) of FY 2024 global health funding (foreign implementers received $5.9 billion or 56%).
Of the $4.6 billion provided to U.S.-based implementers: Funding was provided to organizations in 45 states and the District of Columbia and 151 of 436 congressional districts. The top 10 states accounted for $4.5 billion, or 97%. D.C.-based organizations received the largest amount of funding ($2 billion), primarily because the global health supply chain contractor is based on D.C., followed by Maryland ($661 million), North Carolina ($555 million), Virginia ($386 million), Massachusetts ($294 million), New York ($283 million), Washington ($217 million), Georgia ($61 million), Tennessee ($43 million), and California ($37 million). The top 10 congressional districts accounted for $4.2 billion, or 90%. Again, D.C. received the largest amount of funding ($2 billion), followed by NC-04 ($553 million), MD-08 ($384 million), MD-07 ($274 million), WA-07 ($188 million), VA-08 ($188 million), VA-11 ($180 million), NY-13 ($157 million), MA-05 ($142 million), and MA-08 ($141 million).
Detailed data are provided below.
States
Congressional Districts