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CONTRIBUTOR: JOE CERRELL
It's our responsibility to #stopthemyth on foreign aid
Two weeks ago, Bill and Melinda Gates released their annual letter for 2014. I was excited to see it focus ondebunking persistent myths in development aid, and it got me thinking about the myths I’ve encountered working in advocacy, government relations and communications at the Gates Foundation for the past decade.
One
constant refrain about aid that I’ve heard — particularly in more
recent years living in Europe — is this: “We have to choose between
helping the poor here at home and helping the poor abroad.”
The
truth is that framing the discussion in these terms poses a false
choice, that if we only cut off resources for overseas aid programs, we
could fix our domestic financial challenges at home. The truth is that
the amount of assistance provided to poor countries is a tiny fraction
of national budgets, contrary to prevailing public opinion. We all share
a common interest in ensuring continued support for both programs at
home and internationally.
Huge return on small investment
Let’s
be clear — funding support for domestic issues comes first, and it
always has. Take the United Kingdom for example, one of the largest aid
donors in the world. In 2012, the combined expenditure for many of the
biggest domestic social programs (pensions, welfare and health care)
accounted for more than 50 percent of the U.K. annual budget, while the
amount spent on overseas aid by contrast is less than 1 percent. This
general proportion of spending is the same for all major aid donors,
including the United States.
When
you then see what relatively small investments can lead to — including
expanded immunization coverage, declines in chronic hunger amongst
children and big gains in agriculture productivity — the case for
foreign aid is undeniable.
Why
then does this myth persist? The biggest reason is that so few people
are aware of how little is spent on overseas aid and the great impact it
is having. A recent survey from the Kaiser Family Foundation found
that most Americans believe that 28 percent of the U.S. budget goes to
foreign aid. The same survey also showed that when people understood
that aid was only about 1 percent of the budget, they were much more
supportive of maintaining and even increasing the amount.
Click on the image to view larger version.
The bottom line
Quite
simply, if 1 percent of the budget was redirected back to domestic
issues in a donor country, it would only be a drop in the bucket — but
invested in the developing world, it is helping to spur historic
progress and prosperity.
As
Bill and Melinda Gates pointed out, by many measures the world is
better today than it has ever been. Upwards of a billion people have
lifted themselves out of poverty; many countries that used to be
recipients of aid are now self-sufficient, and some have become emerging
donors.
What
this says to me is that if more people knew what is undeniably true —
that aid is a small piece of the budget and that it works — they would
support it. We need to do a better job sharing the success stories and
each of us has a shared responsibility to help #stopthemyth.
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