Warrigal
SF VIP
- Location
- Sydney, Australia
All but the poorest countries set aside some of their wealth for overseas aid. Some of that aid goes to disaster relief for earthquakes, famines, refugee camps and so on but one important aspect of foreign aid is money allocated for development in third world countries.
Development aid is important because it contributes to good governance and thus to peace in the countries being helped.
This is a list of development aid contributions by country or country block for 2015.
European Union – $87.64 billion[SUP][3][/SUP]
Australia drops from 12 to 16, US from 1 to 20 and Canada 8 to 14. New Zealand goes in the other direction, up from 21 to 15.
Make of that what you will.
These figures are government and government agencies only - no private donations - and do not include military expeditionary expenditure.
Development aid is important because it contributes to good governance and thus to peace in the countries being helped.
This is a list of development aid contributions by country or country block for 2015.
European Union – $87.64 billion[SUP][3][/SUP]
- United States – $31.08 billion
- United Kingdom – $18.70 billion
- Germany – $17.78 billion
- Japan – $9.32 billion
- France – $9.23 billion
- Sweden – $7.09 billion
- Netherlands – $5.81 billion
- Canada – $4.29 billion
- Norway – $4.28 billion
- Italy – $3.84 billion
- Switzerland – $3.54 billion
- Australia – $3.22 billion
- Denmark – $2.57 billion
- South Korea – $1.91 billion
- Belgium – $1.89 billion
- Spain – $1.60 billion
- Finland – $1.29 billion
- Austria – $1.21 billion
- Ireland – $0.72 billion
- Poland – $0.44 billion
- New Zealand – $0.44 billion
- Luxembourg – $0.36 billion
- Portugal – $0.31 billion
- Greece – $0.28 billion
- Czech Republic – $0.20 billion
Looking at it another way, this is the same list ranked by percentage of gross national income
- Sweden – 1.40%
- Norway – 1.05%
- Luxembourg – 0.93%
- Denmark – 0.85%
- Netherlands – 0.76%
- United Kingdom – 0.71%
- Finland – 0.56%
- Switzerland – 0.52%
- Germany – 0.52%
- Belgium – 0.42%
- France – 0.37%
- Ireland – 0.36%
- Austria – 0.32%
- Canada – 0.28%
- New Zealand – 0.27%
- Australia – 0.27%
- Iceland – 0.24%
- Japan – 0.22%
- Italy – 0.21%
- United States – 0.17%
- Portugal – 0.16%
- Slovenia – 0.15%
- Greece – 0.14%
- South Korea – 0.14%
- Spain – 0.13%
Australia drops from 12 to 16, US from 1 to 20 and Canada 8 to 14. New Zealand goes in the other direction, up from 21 to 15.
Make of that what you will.
These figures are government and government agencies only - no private donations - and do not include military expeditionary expenditure.