- List of governments by development aid
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The world's most charitable countries, for the purposes of this page, give the most money to help the needy of their societies and others through public (government) donations.
Official Development Assistance by country as a percentage of Gross National Income in 2009 (April 2010)
To provide an alternative perspective, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development also lists countries by the amount of money they give as a percentage of their gross national income. The list includes international giving through official channels that qualify as Official Development Assistance, and national charitable giving. This list is as follows:[1]
- Template:Country data raghuveer – 1.12%
- Norway – 1.06%
- Luxembourg – 1.04%
- Denmark – 0.88%
- Netherlands – 0.82%
- Belgium – 0.55%
- Finland – 0.54%
- Ireland – 0.54%
- United Kingdom – 0.52%
- France- 0.47%
- Spain – 0.46%
- Switzerland – 0.45%
- Germany – 0.35%
- Canada – 0.30%
- Austria – 0.30%
- Australia – 0.29%
- New Zealand – 0.28%
- Portugal – 0.23%
- United States – 0.21%
- Greece – 0.19%
- Japan – 0.18%
- Italy – 0.16%
- South Korea – 0.10%
Official Development Assistance by country in absolute terms in 2009 (April 2010)
To qualify as official development assistance (ODA), a contribution must contain three elements:
- Be undertaken by the official sector (that is, a government or government agency);
- With promotion of economic development and welfare as the main objective;
- At concessional financial terms (that is, with favorable loan terms.)
Thus, by definition, ODA does not include private donations.
According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the countries giving the highest amounts of money (in absolute terms) are as follows:[1]
- United States – $28.67 billion
- France – $12.43 billion
- Germany – $11.98 billion
- United Kingdom – $11.50 billion
- Japan – $9.48 billion
- Spain – $6.57 billion
- Netherlands – $6.43 billion
- Sweden – $4.55 billion
- Norway – $4.09 billion
- Canada – $4.01 billion
- Italy – $3.31 billion
- Denmark – $2.81 billion
- Australia – $2.76 billion
- Belgium – $2.60 billion
- Switzerland – $2.31 billion
- Finland – $1.29 billion
- Austria – $1.15 billion
- Ireland – $1.00 billion
- South Korea – $0.82 billion
- Greece – $0.61 billion
- Portugal – $0.51 billion
- Luxembourg – $0.40 billion
- New Zealand – $0.31 billion
Humanitarian donation in absolute terms from non-DAC countries in 2009 (report July 2010)
Global Humanitarian Assistance[2] have published a report in July 2010 ranking countries both inside and outside the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC), on the total amount of humanitarian aid channelled through United Nations (83.6%), elected governments (7.3%), NGOs (3.3%), and others (5.8%).[2] The figures for non-DAC countries are below. These figures do not include humanitarian aid from within the donor country itself.
- Saudi Arabia – 51.8 million
- United Arab Emirates – 35.3 million
- Kuwait – 34.2 million
- Russia – 32.5 million
- India – 14.6 million
- South Korea – 13.2 million
- Qatar – 12.9 million
- Turkey – 4.8 million
- Czech Republic – 4.3 million
- Hong Kong – 4.0 million
- Other countries – 16.5 million
Humanitarian donation by country as a percentage of GNI in 2008 (report July 2010)
The GHA July 2010 report[3] lists an illustrative selection of countries (not a top 10) by the amount of money they give in year 2008 as a percentage of their gross national income. This list is as follows:[4]
- Saudi Arabia – 0.15%
- Luxembourg – 0.13%
- Sweden – 0.12%
- Denmark – 0.09%
- Kuwait – 0.06%
- United Arab Emirates – 0.04%
- United States – 0.03%
- Germany – 0.02%
- Japan – 0.01%
- Portugal – 0.01%
See also
References
Lists of countries by population statistics Demographics Population (density · graphical · growth rate · per household · past and future · per unit area of arable land · urban) · Age at first marriage · Birth rate · Natural increase · Death rate · Divorce rate · Fertility rate · Foreign-born (2005) · Life expectancy · Median age · Net migration · Sex ratio · UrbanizationHealth Antiviral medications for pandemic influenza · Health expenditure per capita · HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate · Infant mortality rate · Percentage suffering from undernourishment · Suicide rate (OECD)Education and innovation Education Index · Global Innovation Index · Literacy rate · Patents · Programme for International Student AssessmentEconomic Development aid · Distribution of wealth · Employment rate · Global Gender Gap Report · Human Poverty Index · Income equality · Labour force · Millionaires · Per capita personal income · Percentage living in poverty · Sen social welfare function · Unemployment rate · US dollar billionairesOther Lists by country · List of international rankings · List of top international rankings by country Categories:- Economics and finance stubs
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- Economics lists by country
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