misspelledsearch.com:

aid consolidation financial

information page

If you cannot find the information you are searching for on this page, we suggest searching Google with the correct spelling "aid consolidation financial":

Google

For AID used as an abbreviation, see AID.
For the homonym "aide", see Aide.
It has been suggested that Foreign aid be merged into this article or section. (Discuss)

Aid (or "international aid", "overseas aid", or "foreign aid", especially in the United States) is the assistance, often financial, which may be provided to communities or countries in the event of a humanitarian crisis or to achieve a socioeconomic objective. Humanitarian aid is therefore primarily used for emergency relief, while development aid aims to create long-term sustainable economic growth. Wealthier countries will typically provide aid to economically developing countries.

Many dedicated aid organisations exist, both within government (eg. USAID, DFID, ECHO), at an international level (eg. United Nations or regional relief agencies), or as the joint effort of diverse nations, peoples or non-governmental organisations acting through international commissions, treaties, conventions or protocols (eg. ActionAid, Oxfam, Mercy Corps).

The International Committee of the Red Cross is unique in being mandated by international treaty to uphold the Geneva Conventions. Aid organisations may provide both kinds of aid, or specialise in humanitarian aid (eg. the Red Cross and Red Crescent), or development aid (eg. the War on Want).

Contents

  • 1 Humanitarian aid
  • 2 Development aid
    • 2.1 Quantity
    • 2.2 Conditions
  • 3 See also
  • 4 References
  • 5 External links

Humanitarian aid

Main article: Humanitarian aid

Humanitarian aid is assistance given to people in distress by individuals, organisations, or governments to relieve suffering, during and after man-made emergencies (like wars) and natural disasters. The term often carries an international connotation, but this is not always the case. It is often distinguished from development aid by being focussed on relieving suffering caused by natural disaster or conflict, rather than removing the root causes of poverty or vulnerability.

Humanitarian aid primarily consists of the provision of vital services (such as food aid to prevent starvation) directly by aid agencies, and the provision of funding or in-kind services (like logistics or transport), usually through aid agencies or the government of the affected country. Humanitarian aid is distinguished from humanitarian intervention, which involves armed forces protecting civilians from violent oppression or genocide by state-supported actors.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) is mandated to coordinate the international humanitarian response to a natural disaster or complex emergency (normally linked to conflict), acting on the basis of the United Nations General Assembly Resolution 46/182.

The Humanitarian Charter of the Sphere coalition of leading private voluntary organisations lists the following principles of humanitarian action:

  1. . The right to life with dignity.
  2. . The distinction between combatant and non-combatants.
  3. . The principle of non-refoulement.

Development aid

Main article: Development aid

Development aid (also development assistance, international aid, overseas aid or - especially in the US - foreign aid) is aid given by developed countries to support economic development in developing countries. It is distinguished from humanitarian aid as being aimed at alleviating poverty in the long term, rather than alleviating suffering in the short term.

The term "development aid" is often used to refer specifically to Official Development Assistance (ODA), which is aid given by governments on certain concessional terms, usually as simple donations. It is given by governments through individual countries' international aid agencies and through multilateral institutions such as the World Bank, and by individuals through development charities such as ActionAid, Care International or Oxfam.

The offer to give development aid has to be understood in the context of the Cold War. The speech in which Harry Truman announced the foundation of NATO is also a fundamental document of development policy. "In addition, we will provide military advice and equipment to free nations which will cooperate with us in the maintenance of peace and security. Fourth, we must embark on a bold new program for making the benefits of our scientific advances and industrial progress available for the improvement and growth of underdeveloped areas. More than half the people of the world are living in conditions approaching misery. Their food is inadequate. They are victims of disease. Their economic life is primitive and stagnant. Their poverty is a handicap and a threat both to them and to more prosperous areas. For the first time in history, humanity possesses the knowledge and skill to relieve the suffering of these people.“

Development aid wanted to offer technical solutions to social problems without altering basic social structures. Wherever even moderate changes in these social structures were undertaken, e.g. the land reforms in Guatemala in the early 1950s, the United States usually forcefully opposed these changes.

Quantity

Over the last 20 years, annual ODA has been between $50bn and $60bn. The United States is the world's largest contributor of ODA in absolute terms ($15.7 billion, 2003), but the smallest among developed countries as a percentage of its GDP (0.14% in 2003). The UN target for development aid is 0.7% of GDP; currently only five countries (with Norway in the lead with 0.92%) achieve this.

However, private contributions also make a significant, albeit harder to track, contribution to development aid. Private donations in the United States, for example, are estimated to be at least $34 billion dollars a year, broken down as such:

  • International giving by US foundations: $1.5 billion per year
  • Charitable giving by US businesses: $2.8 billion annually
  • American NGOs: $6.6 billion in grants, goods and volunteers.
  • Religious overseas ministries: $3.4 billion, including health care, literacy training, relief and development.
  • US colleges scholarships to foreign students: $1.3 billion
  • Personal remittances from the US to developing countries: $18 billion in 2000

It is this last figure, remittances, that blurs many definitions of aid: for example, money sent home by foreign workers is counted in this sum. The exact result and effect of remittance money is of some debate: however, even if it is factored out private donations still match ODA in the US. In many cases privately donated money is spent much more effectively than ODA, which must go through various governmental layers before reaching the problem. However, in other cases private sums disappear completely without any trace of their existence. Unfortunately, private aid figures are not tracked so well as ODA in many countries, so it is difficult to make across-the-board comparisons between various nations.

In the United States, popular estimates of spending on aid are often highly inflated - 15-25% of the federal budget is a typical answer; the real number is closer to 1%. In absolute terms, the $15-20bn of aid compares with $50bn spent annually on the war on drugs and $500bn spent on the military. Some commentators, such as Jeffrey Sachs, have said that if the US spent more money on helping the poor, it wouldn't need to spend quite so much on defending itself against them.

Conditions

See tied aid, conditionality, structural adjustment, aid effectiveness

In many cases, aid comes with conditions attached. These conditions may range from demands that some or all of the donated money be spent on goods or services (such as consultancy) from the donor country ("tied aid"), to demands that the recipient privatise various services ("conditionality"). Output-based aid may also be used.

See also

Look up aid in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • Attacks on humanitarian workers
  • Central Emergency Response Fund
  • Debt relief
  • List of development aid agencies
  • Millennium Challenge Account
  • Millennium Development Goals
  • Timeline of events in humanitarian relief and development

References

  • Håkan Malmqvist (2000), "Development Aid, Humanitarian Assistance and Emergency Relief", Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Sweden [1]
  • Andrew Rogerson with Adrian Hewitt and David Waldenberg (2004), "The International Aid System 2005–2010 Forces For and Against Change", ODI Working Paper 235 [2]
  • "The US and foreign aid assistance" [3]
  • Millions Saved A compilation of case studies of successful foreign assistance by the Center for Global Development.
  • ActionAid, May 2005, "Real Aid" - analysis of the proportion of aid wasted on consultants, tied aid, etc

External links

  • OECD Development Co-operation Directorate (DAC)
  • AiDA: Accessible Information on Development Activities
  • www.realityofaid.org
  • Aid Harmonization: What Will It Take to Meet the Millennium Development Goals?

This aid consolidation financial index site has been developed to help wayward users find the information they are looking for, no matter how they are mistakenly spelled or mistyped. This site is designed to help users find aid consolidation financial information for the following query variants:

aid consolidation aid consolidation fiancial aid consolidation finncial aid consolidation finacial
aid consolidation finanial aid consolidation financal aid consolidation financil aid consolidation fnancial
aid consolidation phinancair aid consolidation finantial aid consolidation phinansail aid consolidation phinantial
aid consolidation phinantail aid consolidation phenantial aid consolidation financair aid consolidation finansail
aid consolidation finantail aid consolidation phenancair aid consolidation finansial aid consolidation phenansail
aid consolidation phinansial aid consolidation phenantail aid consolidation phenansial aid consolidation financail
aid consolidation financiar aid consolidation phenancail aid consolidation phenancial aid consolidation phinancail
aid consolidation phenanciar aid consolidation phinancial aid consolidation phinanciar aid consolidation phiegnancai
aid consolidation feignancia aid consolidation financia aid consolidation fiegnancea aid consolidation pheignancia
aid consolidation phenancia aid consolidation phiegnancea aid consolidation feignancai aid consolidation phinancia
aid consolidation fnancia aid consolidation pheignancai aid consolidation financai aid consolidation fiancia
aid consolidation feignancea aid consolidation phenancai aid consolidation finncia aid consolidation pheignancea
aid consolidation phinancai aid consolidation finacia aid consolidation fiegnancia aid consolidation financea
aid consolidation finania aid consolidation phiegnancia aid consolidation phenancea aid consolidation financa
aid consolidation fiegnancai aid consolidation phinancea aid consolidation fnanciai aid consolidation phnanciai
aid consolidation financiai aid consolidation flnanclal aid consolidation fimancial aid consolidation financila
aid consolidation finanical aid consolidation finacnial aid consolidation finnacial aid consolidation fianncial
aid consolidation fniancial aid consolidation ifnancial aid consolidation inancial aid financial
aid consoliation financial aid consolidtion financial aid consolidaion financial aid consolidatin financial
aid cnsolidation financial aid consolidatiom financial aid cosolidation financial aid consoridatiom financial
aid conolidation financial aid conslidation financial aid consoidation financial aid consoldation financial
aid consoridachun financial aid consolidachon financial aid consoridachon financial aid consolidachun financial
aid consoridashun financial aid consoridashon financial aid consolidasion financial aid consoridasion financial
aid consolidaton financial aid consolidashun financial aid consolidashon financial aid consoridation financial
aid consoridaton financial aid consolidtio financial aid consolidatio financial aid consolidaio financial
aid consoridatio financial aid consolidato financial aid cnsolidatio financial aid cosolidatio financial
aid conolidatio financial aid conslidatio financial aid consoidatio financial aid consoldatio financial
aid consoliatio financial aid consoiidation financial aid consolldatlon financial aid comsolidation financial
aid consolidatino financial aid consolidatoin financial aid consolidaiton financial aid consolidtaion financial
aid consoliadtion financial aid consoldiation financial aid consoildation financial aid consloidation financial
aid conoslidation financial aid cosnolidation financial aid cnosolidation financial aid ocnsolidation financial
aid onsolidation financial consolidation financial ad consolidation financial id consolidation financial
ai consolidation financial add consolidation financial ia consolidation financial ade consolidation financial
aide consolidation financial iad consolidation financial ead consolidation financial ady consolidation financial
adi consolidation financial ald consolidation financial

If you would like to add or correct the content of this site, or if you are interested in supporting the efforts of misspelledsearch.com by placing your product information on these aid consolidation financial pages, please contact mistype@gmail.com for details.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "aid".