In preparing the budget, the Principal Recipient (PR) should include all relevant direct costs and indirect overhead costs.
The PR is responsible for negotiating any indirect and overhead costs to be charged by Sub-recipients (SRs) and other implementing entities. If such entities are international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), the relevant indirect cost recovery policies on SR costs apply. Local NGOs should include all charges as direct costs.
When formulating Global Fund budgets, UNDP policy is adhered to with respect to cost recovery. UNDP distinguishes between two types of costs in the implementation of its activities. These are:
General Management Support
GMS is defined as indirect costs incurred by an organization as a function and in support of its activities, projects and programmes. The key feature of these costs is that they cannot be traced unequivocally to specific activities, project or programmes.
Based on the exceptional approval of UNDP’s Executive Board for existing corporate framework agreements, the GMS rate between the Global Fund and UNDP is 7 percent. The agreed percentage fee for GMS between UNDP and the Global Fund is corporately agreed, and as it is Executive Board legislated, it is non-negotiable. GMS is to be categorized as overhead and included as a budget line for all grants. This GMS rate is applicable for the Principal Recipient role and when UNDP is providing technical support to a Global Fund Principal Recipient or Sub-recipient through a Financing Agreement. Any deviations to the GMS rate must be approved by the BMS Director prior to any negotiations with the donor. Refer to UNDP Programme and Operations Policies and Procedures (POPP) on Resource Planning and Cost Recovery for detailed guidance on GMS, and in case of specific queries, reach out to the GFPHST Finance Team or Programme Team.
Direct Project Costs (or delivery enabling services)
Direct Project Costs (or delivery enabling services)
Delivery Enabling Services (DES, formerly known as DPC) are organizational costs incurred in the implementation of a development activity or service that can be directly traced and attributed to that development activity (projects & programmes) or service. Therefore, these costs are included in the project budget and charged directly to the project budget for the development activity and/or service, in this case, those included in a Global Fund grant.
DES are driven by either: (i) Programme implementation and implementation support activities – costs incurred by UNDP to support project implementation by Operations Units, including services related to finance, procurement, human resources, administration, issuance of contracts, security, travel, assets, general services and information and communications technology; or (ii) Development effectiveness – activities and costs that support programme quality, coherence and alignment and relate to results in country and at regional levels. These are activities of a policy advisory, technical and implementation nature essential to deliver development results. In UNDP Country Offices (COs), these are the costs associated with Programme Units and Programme Support Units.
Direct project costs shall be identified during the project initiation phase. All anticipated programmatic and operational inputs, including development effectiveness activities and implementation support arrangements, need to be identified, estimated, and fully costed during the preparation of the project budget and annual work plan. DPC costs are to be calculated based on the actual costs required to provide implementation project support.
The below are the options for implementing DPC for the GF projects:
Please refer to POPP/PPM Design/Prepare Fully costs Budgets for Projects/Guidelines for GF projects: Guidance Note on Planning and Costing Global Fund (GF) Projects
Please refer to POPP/PPM Design/Prepare Fully costs Budgets for Projects/Guidelines for GF projects: Guidance Note on Planning and Costing Global Fund (GF) Projects
Audit costs
The audits that are carried out by UNDP’s Office of Audit and Investigations (OAI) cover only the Principal Recipient (PR) activities as managed by a given UNDP Country Office (CO).
Effective 19 September 2017, UNDP and the Global Fund agreed to a tailored audit cost recovery process, in alignment with OAI’s risk-based approach to audit, as formalized in the Framework Agreement.
The process agreed with the Global Fund is as follows:
Technical assistance
UNDP and the Global Fund have agreed to charge a lump sum of $50,000 to the budget of the relevant Global Fund grants to cover direct costs incurred by UNDP headquarters or regional offices for providing technical assistance to relevant national entities to prepare them for assuming the role of PR in line with capacity development or transition plans approved by the Country Coordinating Mechanism and/or the Global Fund. Further guidance on Cost Recovery related Technical Assistance can be found here.
1% coordination levy
The 1% coordination levy endorsed by Member States on 31 May 2018 through the United Nations General Assembly resolution 72/279 on the Repositioning of the United Nations development system (paragraph 10) does not apply to contributions from the Global Fund (PR grants or Financial Agreements).
Functional Area: Financial Management Project Stage: Grant Making and Signing; Grant Implementation; Reporting Author: UNDP Language: English Type: Policies, Procedures and guidance Topic: Financial rules and regulations, Financial Reporting Resource File Format: Link Resource Accessibility: Publicly accessible
Functional Area: Financial Management Project Stage: Grant Making and Signing; Grant Implementation; Reporting Author: UNDP Language: English Type: Policies, Procedures and guidance Topic: Financial rules and regulations, Financial Reporting Resource File Format: Link Resource Accessibility: Publicly accessible