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Foreign Assistance: An Introduction to U.S.
January 10, 2022
Programs and Policy
Emily M. Morgenstern
Foreign assistance is the largest component of the international affairs budget and is viewed by
Analyst in Foreign
many Members of Congress as an essential instrument of U.S. foreign policy. On the basis of
Assistance and Foreign
national security, commercial, and humanitarian rationales, U.S. assistance flows through many
Policy
federal agencies and supports myriad objectives. These objectives include promoting economic
growth, reducing poverty, improving governance, expanding access to health care and education,
Nick M. Brown
promoting stability in conflict regions, countering terrorism, promoting human rights,
Analyst in Foreign
strengthening allies, and curbing illicit drug production and trafficking. Since the terrorist attacks
Assistance and Foreign
of September 11, 2001, foreign aid has increasingly been associated with national security policy.
Policy
At the same time, manysome Americans and some Members of Congress view foreign aid as an expense that
the United States cannot afford given current budget deficits.
In FY2018 and competing budget priorities.
In FY2019, U.S. foreign assistance, defined broadly, totaled an estimated $46.8948.18 billion, or 1% of total federal budget authority. About 4341% of this assistance was for bilateral economic development programs, including political/strategic economic assistance; 35% for military aid and nonmilitary security assistance; 1820% for humanitarian activities; and 4% to support the work of multilateral institutions. Assistance can take the form of cash transfers, equipment and commodities, infrastructure, education and training, or technical assistance, and, in recent decades, is provided almost exclusively on a grant rather than loan basis. Most U.S. aid is implemented by nongovernmental organizations rather than foreign governments. The United States is the largest foreign aid donor in the world, accounting for about 20nearly 23% of total official development assistance from major donor governments in 20182019 (the latest year for which these data are available).
Key foreign assistance trends since 2001 include growth in development aid, particularly global health programs; increased security assistance directed toward U.S. allies in thefor anti-terrorism effortefforts; and high levels of humanitarian assistance to address a range of crises. Adjusted for inflation, annual foreign assistance funding since 2001FY2003 has been its highest higher than in any period since the Marshall Plan was implemented in the years immediately following World War II. In FY2018FY2019, Afghanistan, Israel, Jordan, Egypt, and Iraq received the largest amounts of U.S. assistance, reflecting long-standing commitments to Israel and Egypt, the strategic significance of Afghanistan and Iraq, and the strategic and humanitarian importance of Jordan as the crisis in neighboring Syria continues. Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East and North Africa regions each received 25% received 26% of assistance allocated by country or region in FY2018, followed by the Middle East and North Africa, at 24%, and South and Central Asia, at 17%. This was a significant shift from a decade prior, when sub-Saharan Africa received 19% of aid and the Middle East and North Africa 30%, reflecting significant increases in HIV/AIDS-related and humanitarian assistance programs concentrated in Africa between FY2008 and FY2018 and the drawdown of U.S. military forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. Military assistance to Iraq began to decline starting in FY2011, but growing concern about the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has reversed this trend.
This report provides an overview of the U.S. foreign assistance program by answering frequently asked questions on the subject. It is intended to provide a broad view of foreign assistance over time, and will be updated periodically. For more current information on foreign aid funding levels, see CRS Report R45763, Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs: FY2020 Budget and Appropriations, by Cory R. Gill, Marian L. Lawson, and Emily M. Morgenstern.
FY2019, followed by South and Central Asia, at 14%.
This report provides an overview of U.S. foreign assistance by answering frequently asked questions on the subject. It is intended to provide a broad view of foreign assistance over time, and will be updated periodically. For more current information on foreign aid funding levels, see CRS Report R46935, Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs: FY2022 Budget and Appropriations, by Cory R. Gill, Marian L. Lawson, and Emily M. Morgenstern.
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Contents
Foreign Assistance: An Introduction to U.S. Programs and Policy ................................................. 1
How Is “U.S. Foreign Assistance” Defined and Counted? ....................................................... 1
Foreign Aid Purposes and Priorities ................................................................................................ 3
What Are the Rationales and Objectives of U.S. Foreign Assistance? ..................................... 3
Rationales for Foreign Aid .................................................................................................. 3 Objectives of Foreign Aid ................................................................................................... 4
What Are the Major Foreign Aid Funding Categories and Accounts? ...................................... 5
Bilateral Development Assistance ...................................................................................... 6 Multilateral Development Assistance ................................................................................. 7 Humanitarian Assistance ..................................................................................................... 7 Strategic Economic Assistance ........................................................................................... 8 Security Assistance ............................................................................................................. 9
Delivery of Foreign Assistance ...................................................................................................... 11
What Executive Branch Agencies Implement Foreign Assistance Programs? ........................ 11
U.S. Agency for International Development ..................................................................... 12 U.S. Department of Defense ............................................................................................. 12 U.S. Department of State .................................................................................................. 13 U.S. Department of the Treasury ...................................................................................... 13 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services .............................................................. 14 Millennium Challenge Corporation .................................................................................. 14 Other Agencies .................................................................................................................. 14
What Are the Different Forms in Which U.S. Assistance Is Provided? .................................. 15
Expertise ........................................................................................................................... 15 Training ............................................................................................................................. 16 Grants ................................................................................................................................ 16 In-Kind Goods .................................................................................................................. 16 Economic Infrastructure .................................................................................................... 16 Direct Budget Support ...................................................................................................... 17
How Much Assistance Is Provided as Loans and How Much as Grants? What Are
Some Types of Loans? Have Loans Been Repaid? Why Is Repayment of Some Loans Forgiven? ................................................................................................................... 17
Loan/Grant Composition .................................................................................................. 17 Development Finance ....................................................................................................... 18 Debt Forgiveness .............................................................................................................. 18
Does the Private Sector Have a Role in Foreign Assistance? ................................................. 19 Which Countries Receive U.S. Foreign Assistance? ............................................................... 19
Foreign Aid Spending .................................................................................................................... 21
How Large Is the U.S. Foreign Assistance Budget? ............................................................... 21 What Does Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Mean?................................................ 23 How Much Foreign Assistance Is Spent on U.S. Goods and Services? .................................. 24 How Does the United States Rank as a Donor of Foreign Aid? .............................................. 26
Congress and Foreign Assistance .................................................................................................. 28
What Congressional Committees Oversee Foreign Aid Programs? ........................................ 28 What Are the Major Foreign Aid Legislative Vehicles? .......................................................... 28
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Figures Figure 1. FY2019 Aid Program Composition ................................................................................. 6 Figure 2. Foreign Assistance Implementing Agencies, FY2019 .................................................... 11 Figure 3. Assistance by Type, FY2019 Obligations ...................................................................... 15 Figure 4. Regional Distribution of Assistance, FY1999, FY2009, and FY2019 ........................... 21 Figure 5. Aid as a Percentage of the Federal Budget and GDP, FY1976-FY2019 ........................ 22 Figure 6. Foreign Assistance Funding Trends, FY1976-FY2019 .................................................. 23 Figure 7. Overseas Contingency Operations, FY2012-FY2021 .................................................... 24 Figure 8. Top 15 Bilateral Donors of Official Development Assistance, 2019 ............................. 27
Tables Table 1. U.S. Foreign Assistance from All Sources, by Objective and Program Area:
FY2019 ......................................................................................................................................... 4
Table 2. Top Recipients of U.S. Foreign Assistance from All Sources,
FY1999, FY2009, and FY2019 .................................................................................................. 20
Table A-1. Foreign Aid Funding Trends (Obligations) .................................................................. 30
Appendixes Appendix A. Data Table ................................................................................................................ 30 Appendix B. Common Foreign Assistance Abbreviations ............................................................ 33
Contacts Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 34
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Foreign Assistance: An Introduction to U.S. Programs and Policy U.S. foreign assistance (also commonly called foreign aid—the two terms are used interchangeably in this report) is the largest component of the international affairs budget, for decades viewed by many Members of Congress as an essential instrument of U.S. foreign policy.1 1 Since the European Recovery Program (better known as the Marshall Plan) helped rebuild Europe after World War II, in an effort to bolster the economy of postwar Europe, prevent the expansion of communism, and jumpstart world trade, modern U.S. foreign assistance programs have continually evolved to reflect changing foreign policy strategy, global challenges, and U.S. domestic priorities.22 The Cold War emphasis on containing communism was replaced by regional development priorities and a focus on counter-narcotics assistance in the 1990s. After the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, a large portion of U.S. assistance focused on counterterrorism programs and efforts related to U.S. military interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan. At the same time, global health assistance expanded significantly to address the global HIV/AIDS epidemic. More recently, foreign assistance policy has focused on competingstrategic competition with China and Russia and addressing protracted global humanitarian crises. Each year, Congress considers the size, composition, and purpose of foreign assistance programs are considered by Congress, primarily through the appropriations process.
This report addresses a number of the more frequently asked questions regarding U.S. foreign assistance; its objectives, costs, and organization; the role of Congress; and how it compares to those of other aid donors. ItThe report attempts not only to present a current snapshot of American U.S. foreign assistance, but also to illustrate the extent to which this instrument of U.S. foreign policy has evolved over time.
Data presented in the report are the most current, consistent, and reliable figures available, generally updated through FY2018FY2019. Dollar amounts come from a variety of sources, including the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Foreign Aid Explorer database (Explorer)ForeignAssistance.gov and annual Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs (SFOPS) appropriations acts. AsThe report will be revised as new data are obtained or additional issues and questions arise, the report will be revised.
.
Foreign assistance abbreviations used in this report are listed inin Appendix B.
In its broadest sense, U.S. foreign assistance, or foreign aid, is defined under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (P.L. 87-195, as amended, FAA), the primary legislative basis of these programs, as
any tangible or intangible item provided by the United States Government [including "by means of gift, loan, sale, credit, or guaranty"] to a foreign country or
1 Other tools of U.S. foreign policy are the U.S. defense establishment, the diplomatic corps, public diplomacy, and trade policy. American defense capabilities, even if not employed, stand as a potential stick that can be wielded to obtain specific objectives. The State Department diplomatic corps are the eyes, ears, and often the negotiating voice of the U.S. government abroad. Public diplomacy programs, such as the Fulbright program and Voice of America, project an image of the United States that may influence foreign views. U.S. trade policy—through free trade agreements and Export-Import Bank financing, for example—may directly affect the economies of other nations. Foreign aid is a particularly flexible tool—it can act as both carrot and stick, and is a means of influencing events, solving specific problems, and projecting U.S. values.
2 For more information on the Marshall Plan, see CRS Report R45079, The Marshall Plan: Design, Accomplishments, and Significance.
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Foreign Assistance: An Introduction to U.S. Programs and Policy
any tangible or intangible item provided by the United States Government [including “by means of gift, loan, sale, credit, or guaranty”] to a foreign country or international organization under this or any other Act, including but not limited to any training, service, or technical advice, any item of real, personal, or mixed property, any or technical advice, any item of real, personal, or mixed property, any agricultural commodity, United States dollars, and any currencies of any foreign country which are commodity, United States dollars, and any currencies of any foreign country which are owned by the United States Government.... (§634(b))
For many decades, nearly all assistance annually requested by the executive branch and debated and authorized by Congress was ultimately encompassed in the foreign operations appropriations measure (currently within the Department of State, Foreign Operations and Related Programs [SFOPS] appropriations[SFOPS] appropriations measure but before FY2008, housed in the Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs appropriations measure) and the international food aid title of the agriculture appropriations.3Agriculture appropriations measure.3 In the U.S. federal budget, the 150 (international affairs) budget function has subsumed these traditional foreign assistance accounts.44 The SFOPS bill and Function 150 budget also include State Department diplomatic and related programs, which are not considered foreign assistance.
By the 1990s, it became increasingly apparent that the scope of U.S. foreign assistance was not fully accounted for by the total of the foreign operations and international food aid appropriations. Many U.S. departments and agencies had adopted their own assistance programs, funded out of their ownrespective budgets and commonly in the form of professional exchanges with counterpart agencies abroad. These assistance efforts, conducted outside the purview of the traditional foreign aid authorizingauthorization and appropriations committees, grew more substantial and varied in the mid-1990s. The Department of Defense (DOD) Nunn-Lugar effort provided billions in aid to secure and eliminate nuclear and other weapons, as did Department of Energy activities to control and protect nuclear materials—both aimed largely at the former Soviet Union. Growing participation by DOD in health and humanitarian efforts and expansion of health programs in developing countries by the National Institutes of Health and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, especially in response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, followed. In the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, and the subsequent U.S. invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, DOD-funded and implemented aid programs in Iraq and Afghanistan to train and equip foreign forces and win hearts and minds through development efforts, complemented by development efforts to “win hearts and minds” of local populations, have at times been considerably larger than other military and development assistance programs provided under the foreign operations appropriations.
measure.
While the executive branch requests and Congress debates most foreign aid within the parameters of the SFOPS appropriationappropriations measure, both branches of government have sought to ascertain a fuller picture of assistance programs through improved data collection and reporting. Significant discrepancies remain between data available for different types of aid and, therefore, the level of analysis applied to each. (See text box, "“A Note on Numbers and Sources,"” below.) Nevertheless, to the extent possible, this report tries to capture the broadest definition of aid throughout.
A Note on Numbers and Sources Previous versions of this report presented numeric measures of foreign assistance from a variety of sources, including the Budget of the United States' historical tables, USAID's Foreign Aid Explorer database (Explorer), the State Department's ForeignAssistance.gov website, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's (OECD) Official Development Assistance (ODA) website. Different sources are necessary for comprehensive analysis, but can often lead to inconsistencies from table to table or chart to chart. This report uses data from only two of these sources. This reflects both an effort to ensure consistency in calculations, as well as improved coordination and consolidation of data between the State Department and USAID as a result of the Foreign Aid Transparency and Accountability Act of 2016 (P.L. 114-191). In using only two sources, there is less variation in data, but differences remain with respect to definitions of foreign assistance used by different sources, including:
For the purposes of this report, CRS primarily uses the FAA definition of aid, as reported in Explorer in the form of obligations. ODA data are only used in the section comparing U.S. assistance levels to those of other donor countries.
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Foreign assistance is predicated on several rationales and supports many objectives. The importance and emphasis of various rationales and objectives have changed over time.
Throughout the past 70 years, there have been three key rationales for foreign assistance:
The objectives of aid generally fit within these rationales. Generally, agencies define “humanitarian assistance” as responding to short-term crises, while “development assistance” refers to long-term development aims.
Objectives of Foreign Aid
In 2006, in an effort to rationalize the assistance program more clearly, the State Department developed a framework that organizes U.S. foreign aid around five strategic objectives, each of which includes a number of program elements, also known as sectors. The five objectives are Peace and Security;, Investing in People;, Governing Justly and Democratically;, Economic Growth;Growth, and Humanitarian Assistance. Generally, these objectives and their sectors do not correspond to any one particular budget account in appropriations bills.66 Annually, the Department of State and USAID develop their foreign operations budget request within this framework, allowing for an objective and program-oriented viewpoint for those who seek it. USAID's Explorer website (explorer.usaidThe foreign aid tracking database (Foreignassistance.gov) currently provides a more complete picture of funds obligated for each objective from all parts of the U.S. government (seesee Table 1).
Table 1. U.S. Foreign Assistance from All Sources, by Objective and Program Area: FY2018
FY2019
(obligations in millions of current U.S. dollars)
Aid Objectives and Program Areas
FY2019
Aid Objectives and Program Areas FY2019
Peace and Security
16,109.0 Investing in People
9,273.16
9
Counterterrorism
507.63 Health
8,317.53
Combating Weapons of Mass Destruction
727.68 Education
934.20
Stabilization/Security Sector Reform
11,937.29 Social Services and Assistance
21.43
Counternarcotics
48.66
Transnational Crime
165.59 Governing Justly & Democratically 3,000.16
Conflict Mitigation
488.76 Rule of Law & Human Rights
1,635.55
Peace and Security - General
2,233.48 Good Governance
719.07
6 Most of these objectives are funded through several appropriations accounts. For instance, the objective of Governing Justly and Democratically and each of its individual sectoral elements (see Table 1) are funded through portions of the Development Assistance, Assistance to Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia (AEECA), Economic Support Fund (ESF), International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement (INCLE), and Democracy Fund accounts, as well as by various programs run through other agencies (i.e., those outside of the Department of State, USAID, and the Department of Defense).
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Aid Objectives and Program Areas
FY2019
Aid Objectives and Program Areas FY2019
Political Competition
216.10
Promoting Economic Growth
4,224.83 Civil Society
347.31
Macroeconomic Growth
1,096.35 Democracy and Governance - General
7.68
Trade & Investment
146.69 Policies, Regulations, and Systems
74.47
Financial Sector
69.65
Infrastructure
942.69 Humanitarian Assistance
9,369.58
Agriculture
1,118.69 Protection, Assistance & Solutions
8,904.09
Private Sector Competitiveness
371.79 Disaster Readiness
215.21
92
Economic Opportunity
34.49 Humanitarian Assistance - General
250.28
Environment
372.84
Labor, Mining, Manufacturing
71.65 International Contributions
377.29
Program Management
3,285.81
Multi-Sector
1,634.54
Source: Foreignassistance.gov and CRS calculations. Note: Figures represent net obligations, including de-obligated funds(obligations in millions of current U.S. dollars)
Aid Objectives and Program Areas |
FY2018 |
Aid Objectives and Program Areas |
FY2018 |
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Peace and Security |
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Investing in People |
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Counterterrorism |
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Health |
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Combating Weapons of Mass Destruction |
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Education |
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Stabilization/Security Sector Reform |
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Social Services and Assistance |
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Counternarcotics |
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Transnational Crime |
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Governing Justly & Democratically |
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Conflict Mitigation |
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Rule of Law & Human Rights |
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Peace and Security - General |
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Good Governance |
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Political Competition |
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Promoting Economic Growth |
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Civil Society |
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Macroeconomic Growth |
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Democracy and Governance - General |
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Trade & Investment |
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Policies, Regulations, and Systems |
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Financial Sector |
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Infrastructure |
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Humanitarian Assistance |
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Agriculture |
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Protection, Assistance & Solutions |
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Private Sector Competitiveness |
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Disaster Readiness |
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Economic Opportunity |
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Humanitarian Assistance - General |
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Environment |
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Labor, Mining, General Economic Growth |
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International Contributions |
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Program Management |
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Multi-Sector |
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Source: USAID Explorer and CRS calculations.
Note: Figures represent net obligations and are negative in cases where de-obligated funds exceed new obligations. A similar framework table is included in annual SFOPS congressional budget justifications, and includes only funding in the international affairs (function 150) budget.
Characterizing aid in this way may provide an incomplete picture, as there is considerable overlap among aid categories and purposes. A health project directed at alleviating the effects of HIV/AIDS by feeding orphan children, for example, may also stimulate grassroots democracy and civil society through support of local NGOs. Microcredit programs that support small business development may at the same time enable client entrepreneurs to provide food and education to their children. Water and sanitation improvements may both mitigate health threats and stimulate economic growth by saving time previously devoted to water collection, raising school attendance for girls, and facilitating tourism, among other effects.
The framework used by the Department of State since 2006 organizes assistance by strategic objective and sector. But there are many other ways to categorize foreign aid, one of which is according to the types of activities foreign aid accounts are expected to support, using broad categories such as military,including bilateral development, multilateral development, humanitarian assistance, political/strategic, and nonmilitary security activities. SFOPS appropriations legislation organizes aid accounts by this methodology, whichstrategic economic support, and security and military activities. Such broad categories are used, with some variation, in the title structure of SFOPS appropriations legislation, and can be applied to the international food aid title of the Agriculture appropriations as well as to DOD and other government agency assistance programsprograms. Figure 1 shows total FY2018FY2019 (the most recent year for which complete data are available) foreign assistance obligations from all government agencies categorized this way.
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Foreign Assistance: An Introduction to U.S. Programs and Policy
Bilateral Development Assistance
Figure 1. FY2019 Aid Program
For FY2019categorized this way.
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Source: USAID Explorer and CRS calculations. |
For FY2018, U.S. government departments , U.S. government departments
Composition
and agencies obligated about $15.4 billion (3314.6 billion for bilateral development assistance (31% of total foreign aid)foreign aid) for bilateral development assistance, which is generally intended to improve the economic development and welfare of poor countries. USAID and the State Department jointly implementadminister the majority of bilateral development assistance accounts, including, administering the Development Assistance (DA) and Global Health (Global Health-USAID and Global Health-StatePrograms (GHP) accounts and theUSAID’s Operating Expenses account that allows USAID to operate. Other bilateral
development assistance accounts support the
Source: Foreignassistance.gov and CRS calculations.
development efforts of distinct agencies, such as the Peace Corps, Inter-American Foundation (IAF), Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), and the new U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), among others.
The Secretary of State supervises all bilateral foreign assistance funding under SFOPS appropriations, though the mechanism differs by agency: either through direct programming (Democracy Fund; Global Health-State); supervision of the agency’s leadership (USAID); membership in agency leadership (MCC; DFC); and overall guidance of U.S. foreign policy (Peace Corps).
By far the largest portion of bilateral development assistance is devoted to global health. These programs includesupport objectives such as improving maternal and child health, increasing access to family planning and reproductive health programsservices, and strengthening the government health systems that provide care. In recent monthsSince March 2020, addressing the COVID-19Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in developing countries has become a global health priority. The largest share of global health funding, however, is directed toward treating and combatting the spread of HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis. These funds are largely directed through the State Department'Department’s Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator to other agencies, including USAID and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The latter agency and the National Institutes for Health also conduct programs funded by Labor-Health and Human Services (HHS) appropriations.7
7
Bilateral development assistance programs also aim to foster sustainable broad-based economic progress and social stabilitygrowth, social stability, and effective governance in developing countries. USAID largely manages this aid to fund long-term projects in a wide range of areas. Many programs share the objective in the State Department framework of "promoting economic growth and prosperity":
Independent agencies, such as the Peace Corps and Millennium Challenge Corporation also administer programs considered under bilateral development assistance.
A share of U.S. foreign assistance—4% in FY2018 ($1.8 billion) in FY2019—is provided to finance multilateral development projects. Multilateral aid is funded largely through the International Organizations and Programs (IO&P) account and individual accounts for each of the Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs). This aid is distinct from U.S. dues (assessed contributions) paid to multilateral organizations such as the United Nations, which are not considered foreign assistance.9 It is also distinct from bilateral assistance which may be implemented by multilateral agencies under a contract or cooperative agreement with a U.S. agency. Multilateral development assistance is a method of combining U.S. funds with contributions from other donor nations to share the costs of economic development activities, drawing on a wider range of development experience and perspectives. This collaborative approach means the United States has less control over multilateral assistance than overefforts. Multilateral development assistance often supports programs and objectives similar to those funded through bilateral development assistance, but is channeled through organizations and mechanisms that combine U.S. funds with contributions from other donor nations to share the costs of development activities, drawing on a wider range of development experience and perspectives. Multilateral aid is funded largely through the International Organizations and Programs (IO&P) account and individual accounts for each of the Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) within the SFOPS appropriation.9 MDBs are international institutions that provide loans, grants, and technical assistance to developing countries to aid their economic and social development.
The multilateral approach to aid gives the United States less control over how assistance funds are used compared to bilateral economic assistance, though it also affords the United States a voice in such multilateral efforts. In determining U.S. contributions to the various multilateral institutionsinstitutions, the United States faces the challenge of finding the right balance between the benefits of burden sharing and the constraints of sharingshared control. Policymakers may also consider the strategic implications of U.S. funding levels relative to those of other donors, as funding may be commensurate with influence in comesome multilateral fora.
In FY2018
In FY2019, the United States contributed to the United Nations Children'’s Fund (UNICEF);, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP);, and MDBs, such as the World Bank.10 The U.S. share of donor contributions to each of the MDB concessional (subsidized) and nonconcessional (market rate) loan windows varies widely. For the largest MDB, the World Bank, the United States has contributed about 20.5% to the concessional lending window (the International Development Association [IDA]) and about 17.3% to the nonconcessional lending window (the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development [IBRD]).
Unlike development assistance programs, which are often viewed as long-term efforts that may have the effect of preventing future crises from emerging, humanitarian assistance programs are devoted largely to the immediate alleviation of human suffering in both natural and human-induced disasters, including conflict associated with failed or failing states. For FY2018, obligations for humanitarian assistance programs amounted to $8.5 billion, 18% of total assistance. The, among other multilateral organizations and initiatives.10 The U.S. share of donor contributions to each of these entities varies widely.
Humanitarian Assistance
Unlike development assistance programs, which are often viewed as long-term efforts, humanitarian assistance programs are devoted largely to the immediate alleviation of human suffering caused by both natural and human-induced disasters, including conflict associated with failed or failing states. For FY2019, obligations for humanitarian assistance programs amounted
9 This aid is distinct from U.S. dues (assessed contributions) paid to multilateral organizations such as the United Nations, which are not considered foreign assistance. It is also distinct from bilateral assistance that may be implemented by multilateral agencies under a contract or cooperative agreement with a U.S. agency.
10 For more information on the MDBs, see CRS Report R41170, Multilateral Development Banks: Overview and Issues for Congress, by Rebecca M. Nelson.
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to $9.6 billion, or 20% of total foreign assistance. USAID manages the largest portion of humanitarian assistance is managed through the International Disaster Assistance (IDA) account by USAID, which provides relief and rehabilitation to victims of human-induced and natural disasters. Recent responses have addressed needs arising from the economic and social dislocations of resulting from the ongoing crises in Syria, South Sudan, Yemen, and VenezuelaYemen, and Venezuela, as well as immediate humanitarian needs stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic. A portion of IDA is used for food assistance through the Emergency Food Security Program.
Additional humanitarian assistance goes to programsis administered by the State Department and funded under the Migration and Refugee Assistance (MRA) and the Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance (ERMA) accounts, aimed at addressing the needs of refugeesmigrants, refugees, and internally displaced persons. These accounts support a number of refugee relief organizations, including the U.N. High Commission for Refugees and the International Committee of the Red Cross. The Department of Defense also provides disaster relief under the Overseas Humanitarian, Disaster, and Civic Assistance (OHDACA) account of the DOD appropriations. (For further information on humanitarian programs, see CRS In Focus IF10568, Overview of the Global Humanitarian and Displacement Crisis, by Rhoda Margesson.)
Approximately 8011 Such relief may include logistics support and transportation for humanitarian supplies, addressing hazards to humanitarian delivery such as landmines and other unexploded explosive ordnance, and search and rescue operations, among others.
Approximately 83% of FFPA Title II Agriculture appropriations—nearly $1.5$1.4 billion in obligations in FY2018FY2019—are used by USAID to address emergency humanitarian needs, mostly to purchase U.S. agricultural commodities to supplement both refugee and disaster assistance programs.12
Strategic Economic Assistance
A few accounts provide economic assistance intended to support U.S. political and strategic interests rather than development or humanitarian goalsprograms.11
A few accounts promote special U.S. political and strategic interests. Programs funded through the Economic Support Fund (ESF) account may be indistinguishable from those funded through other development assistance accounts, but are implemented in countries of strategic significance to the United States, and often intended to promote the political and economic stability of U.S. allies.13 Support Fund (ESF) account generally aim to promote political and economic stability, often through activities indistinguishable from those provided under regular development programs.12 However, ESF also provides direct budget support to foreign governments and to support sovereign loan guarantees. For FY2018FY2019, USAID and the State Department obligated $4.1 billion, nearly 9% of total foreign assistance, through this account.
For many years, following the 1979 Camp David accords, most ESF funds went to support the Middle East Peace Process—in FY1998FY1999, for example, 8885% of ESF went to Israel, Egypt, the West BankBank, and Jordan. Those proportions have been significantly lower in recent decades. In FY2008, 19FY2009, 28% of ESF funding went to these countries and, in FY2018FY2019, 26%. Since the September 2001 terrorist attacks, ESF has largely supported countries of importance in thekey to U.S. global counterterrorism strategy. In FY2008efforts such as Iraq and Afghanistan. In FY2009, for example, activities in Iraq and Afghanistan received 5646% of ESF funding (21% in FY2018).
Over the years, Congress has established other accounts to meet specific political or security; that level fell to 24% in FY2019, in line with decreased U.S. military presence.
11 For further information on humanitarian programs, see CRS In Focus IF10568, Overview of the Global Humanitarian and Displacement Crisis, by Rhoda Margesson.
12 Until FY1998, food provided commercially under long-term, low-interest loan terms (Title I of the Food for Peace Act [sometimes referred to as P.L. 480]) was also included in the foreign assistance account. Because of its export focus, it is no longer considered foreign aid. For more information on food aid programs, see CRS Report R45422, U.S. International Food Assistance: An Overview, by Alyssa R. Casey and Emily M. Morgenstern. For more information on the distribution of FFPA Title II funds for FY2019, see USAID’s International Food Assistance Report for FY2019. 13 USAID estimates that over 90% of ESF funds are implemented by USAID for development purposes.
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Over the years, Congress has established other accounts to meet specific strategic interests (some have since been dissolved or reorganized once the need was met). One example is the Assistance to Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia (AEECA) account, established in FY2009 to combine two aid programs that arose from the demise of the Soviet empire to help Central Europe and the newly independent states of the former Soviet Union (FSA) achieve democratic systems and free market economies. Congress briefly retired the account before reestablishing it in the wake of Russian incursions in the independent states. USAID’s Transition Initiatives accounteconomies. Recent SFOPS legislation has also included "funds" and directives drawing from several economic and security assistance accounts to address specific strategic priorities, including the Countering Russian Influence Fund, the Countering Chinese Influence Fund, and the Indo-Pacific Strategy. USAID's Transition Initiatives program also focuses largely on strategic goals, supporting civil society, free media, and inclusive governance in countries and communities in political transition.
Certain entities funded through SFOPS, such as the National Endowment for Democracy, also align with strategic aims through promoting U.S. values. Similarly, the State Department’s Democracy Fund is driven in part by efforts to advance U.S. foreign policy goals. Additionally, recent SFOPS legislation has directed funds from several development and security assistance accounts to address specific strategic priorities, including the Countering Russian Influence Fund, the Countering Chinese Influence Fund, and the Indo-Pacific Strategy.
In the recent past, several DOD-funded aid programs directed at Afghanistan also supported development effortsprovided economic assistance with largely strategic objectives. The Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund and the Business Task Force wound down as the U.S. military presence in that country declined; the Commander'Commander’s Emergency Response Program (CERP) still existsexisted until the U.S. withdrawal from the country. The latter two programs had earlier iterations as well in Iraq.
Several U.S. government agencies support programs to address global concerns that are considered threats to U.S. security and well-being, such as terrorism, illicit narcotics, crime, and weapons proliferationproliferation, by bolstering the law enforcement capabilities of foreign partners. In the past two decades, policymakers have provided increasingincreased support tofor these programs. In FY2018FY2019, these programs amounted to $2.8 billion, or 6% of total assistance.
Nonmilitary bilateral security assistance includes two major objectives: strengthening the justice sector in developing countries, including countering narcotics production and trade, and mitigating the spread of certain weapons.
The State Department is the main administrator of nonmilitary counternarcotics programs.14 The State-managed International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement (INCLE) account supports counternarcotics activities, most notably in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Peru, and Colombia. Programs funded under INCLE also help develop the judicial systems—assisting judges, lawyers, and legal institutions—of many developing countries. DOD and USAID also support counternarcotics activities, the former largely by providing training and equipment, the latter by offering
14 DOD also funds counternarcotics programs to support foreign militaries involved in counternarcotics efforts, but the State Department is designated to oversee counternarcotics support to civilian law enforcement entities.
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alternative crop and employment programs (which generally are considered bilateral development assistance).15
Since the mid-1990s, three U.S. agencies—State, DOD, and Energy—have provided funding, technical assistance, and equipment to counter the proliferation of chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear weapons, and land mines. Originally aimed at the former Soviet Union under the rubric of cooperative threat reduction (CTR), these programs seek to ensure that these weapons are secured andsought to secure such weapons and prevent their spread to rogue nations or terrorist groups prevented.13 The.16 While CTR is provided through Defense appropriations, the State Department manages the Nonproliferation, Anti-Terrorism, Demining and Related Programs (NADR) account, managed by the State Department,which provides for nonproliferation efforts and encompasses civilian anti-terrorism efforts such as detecting and dismantling terrorist financial networks, establishing watch-list systems at border controls, and building partner country anti-terrorism capacities. NADR also funds humanitarian demining programs.
Military Assistance U.S. military assistance provides defense articles and equipment, military training, and other defense-related services to the national-level security forces of U.S. allies and partners. At $13.9 billion, military assistance accounted for about 29% of total U.S. foreign aid in FY2019. The Department of State administers three accounts that fund programs implemented by DOD’s Defense Security Cooperation Administration: Foreign Military Financing (FMF), International Military Education and Training (IMET), and Peacekeeping Operations (PKO). Other military assistance is funded and implemented directly by DOD.
The bulk of military assistance is used to train and equip foreign militaries. FMF, by far the largest of these three State-managed military assistance accounts, provides primarily grant assistance to foreign governments for the purchase of U.S. defense equipment and military training under the Foreign Military Sales program.17 FMF supports U.S. foreign policy and the U.S. defense industry, while helping ensure the interoperability of weapons systems among allies and partners. In FY2019, FMF assistance primarily supported the security needs of Israel, Egypt, Jordan, and Pakistan. Since 2002, DOD appropriations have also supported FMF-like programs, training and equipping security forces in Afghanistan and Iraq. These programs and the accounts that fund them are called the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund (ASFF) and, through FY2012, the Iraq Security Forces Fund (ISFF). Beginning in FY2015, similar support was provided Iraq under the Iraq Train and Equip Fund. DOD also funds train and equip efforts under a global capacity-building program.18
PKO funds are used to support voluntary peacekeeping, humanitarian, and counterterrorism operations, including those not sponsored by the United Nations. PKO also funds capacity-building of U.S. allies and partners in stabilization, conflict resolution, and counterterrorism.
15 For more information on counternarcotics efforts, see CRS Report RL34543, International Drug Control Policy: Background and U.S. Responses, by Liana W. Rosen.
16 For further information on nonproliferation efforts, see CRS Report R43143, The Evolution of Cooperative Threat Reduction: Issues for Congress, by Mary Beth D. Nikitin and Amy F. Woolf.
17 In the past, FMF has also been provided as loans. While reverting to lending has been proposed, Congress has not adopted such a change. For more information on the Foreign Military Sales program, see CRS In Focus IF11437, Transfer of Defense Articles: Foreign Military Sales (FMS), by Nathan J. Lucas and Michael J. Vassalotti.
18 For further information on DOD security cooperation, see CRS In Focus IF11677, Defense Primer: DOD “Title 10” Security Cooperation, by Christina L. Arabia.
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PKO supports both regional initiatives, such as training for an African crisis response force, and individual peacekeeping forces such as those in South Sudan and Central African Republic.19
IMET funds the attendance of mid-to-senior level foreign military personnel, as well as select civilian personnel, in U.S. professional military courses at DOD institutions. While relatively small in dollar terms, the IMET program aids more countries than any other aid account, involving more than 100 countries every year.20
programs.
The State Department is the main implementer of counternarcotics programs. The State-managed International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement (INCLE) account supports counternarcotics activities, most notably in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Peru, and Colombia. Programs funded under INCLE also help develop the judicial systems—assisting judges, lawyers, and legal institutions—of many developing countries, especially in Afghanistan. DOD and USAID also support counternarcotics activities, the former largely by providing training and equipment, the latter by offering alternative crop and employment programs (which are generally considered bilateral development assistance).14
The United States provides military assistance to U.S. friends and allies to help them acquire U.S. military equipment and training. At $13.6 billion, military assistance accounted for about 29% of total U.S. foreign aid in FY2018. The Department of State administers three programs, with corresponding appropriations accounts that are then implemented by DOD. Foreign Military Financing (FMF) is the assistance-funded arm of the Foreign Military Sales program, through which the U.S. government procures defense articles for foreign partners. The program supports U.S. foreign policy, as well as the U.S. defense industry, and helps ensure the interoperability of weapons systems among allies and partners. In FY2018, FMF grants primarily supported the security needs of Israel, Egypt, Jordan, and Iraq. The International Military Education and Training program (IMET) offers military training on a grant basis to foreign military officers and personnel. Peacekeeping funds (PKO) are used to support voluntary non-U.N. peacekeeping operations as well as training for an African crisis response force. Since 2002, DOD appropriations have supported FMF-like programs, training and equipping security forces in Afghanistan and Iraq. These programs and the accounts that fund them are called the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund (ASFF) and, through FY2012, the Iraq Security Forces Fund (ISFF). Beginning in FY2015, similar support was provided Iraq under the Iraq Train and Equip Fund.
Delivery of Foreign Assistance How and in what form assistance reaches an aid recipient can vary widely, depending on the type of aid program, the objective of the assistance, and the agency responsible for providing the aid.
Assistance Programs? Federal agencies may implement foreign assistance programs using funds appropriated directly to them or funds transferred to them from another agency. For example, significant funding appropriated through State Department and Department of Agriculture accounts is used for programs implemented by USAID (seeimplemented by USAID, and most military aid funded through the State Department is implemented by DOD (see Figure 2). The funding data in this section reflect the agency that implemented the aid, not necessarily the agency to which funds were originally appropriated.
For 5060 years, USAID has implemented the bulk of the U.S. bilateral development and humanitarian assistance. It directly implements the Development Assistance, International Disaster Assistance, and Transition Initiatives accounts, as well as a USAID-designated portion of the Global Health Programs account. Jointly with the State Department, USAID co-manages ESF, AEECA, and Democracy Fund programs, which frequently support development activities as a means of promoting U.S. political and strategic goals.15supporting U.S. strategic interests.21 Based on historical averages, according to USAID, the agency implements more than 90% of ESF, 70% of AEECA, 40% of the Democracy Fund, and about 60% of the Global HIV/AIDS funding appropriated to the State Department. USAID also implements all Food for Peace Act Title II food assistance funded through agriculture appropriations.
USAID obligated an estimated $20.07 billion to implement foreign assistance programs and activities in FY2018.16 appropriations.
The agency'’s staff in 20182019 totaled 9,747,17688, of which about 67% were working overseas, overseeing the . USAID staff do not typically implement programs directly, but rather plan and oversee the implementation of hundreds of projects undertaken by thousands of private sector contractors, consultants, and nongovernmental organizations.18
DOD22
USAID obligated an estimated $21.2 billion to implement foreign assistance programs and activities in FY2019.23
U.S. Department of Defense
DOD, through the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, implements all SFOPS-funded military assistance programs—FMF, IMET, and PKO. DOD also carries out an array of assistance activities, funded through defense appropriations legislation, which typically involve training, equipping, and other support to partner or coalition military operations. DOD uses the term “security cooperation” to refer broadly to DOD-implemented activities with foreign security establishments. While some of these activities fit the FAA definition of foreign assistance, not all security cooperation activities do. These programs are primarily authorized by Title 10, U.S.C. such as DOD’s main train and equip authority, Section 333 Building Partner Capacity.24 In addition to programs codified under Title 10, DOD security cooperation includes temporary, country-specific authorities that require annual renewal in annual defense authorization acts such as the Counter-ISIS Train and Equip Fund (CTEF) for Iraq and Syria, the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund (ASFF), and the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative (USAI). Other programs such as CTR, authorized under Title 50, U.S.C., address bioweapons and nuclear nonproliferation in eligible countries, among other activities.
In FY2019, DOD implemented an estimated $14.1 billion in foreign assistance programs.25
21 The State Department determines the distribution of funds from these accounts. 22 This total includes employees from the USAID Office of Inspector General, but does not include institutional support contractors. USAID Agency Financial Report, FY2019.
23 See Foreignassistance.gov. 24 10 U.S.C. §§301-386. 25 Foreignassistance.gov.
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assistance programs—FMF, IMET, and PKO—in conjunction with the policy guidance of the Department of State. The Defense Security Cooperation Agency is the primary DOD body responsible for these programs. DOD also carries out an array of state-building activities, funded through defense appropriations legislation, which are usually in the context of training exercises and military operations. These sorts of activities, once the exclusive jurisdiction of civilian aid agencies, include development assistance to Iraq and Afghanistan through the Commander's Emergency Response Program (CERP), the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund, and the Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund, and elsewhere through the Defense Health Program, counterdrug activities, and humanitarian and disaster relief. Training and equipping of Iraqi and Afghan police and military, though similar in nature to some traditional security assistance programs, has been funded and implemented primarily through DOD appropriations, though implementing the Iraq police training program was a State Department responsibility from 2012 until it was phased out in 2013.
In FY2018, DOD implemented an estimated $13.31 billion in foreign assistance programs.19
U.S. Department of State
The Department of State manages and co-manages a wide range of assistance programs. It is the lead U.S. civilian agency on security and refugee related assistance, and haswith sole responsibility for administering the International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement (INCLE) and Nonproliferation, Antiterrorism, Demining and Related Programs (NADR) accounts, and the two Migration and Refugee accounts (MRA and ERMA), and the International Organizations and Programs (IO&P) account. State is also home to the Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator (OGAC), which manages the State Department'’s portion of Global HealthHealth Programs funding in support of HIV/AIDS programs, though many of these funds are transferred to and implemented by USAID, the National Institutes of Health, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The State Department also channels much of the assistance it manages to international organizations, including the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the Global Fund to Fight HIV, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund).
In conjunction with USAID, the State Department manages the Economic Support Fund (ESF), AEECA assistance to the former communist states, and Democracy Fund accounts. For these accounts, the State Department largely sets the overall policy and direction of funds, while USAID implements the preponderance ofmany programs. In addition, the State Department, through its Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, has policy authority over the Foreign Military Financing (FMF), International Military Education and Training (IMET), and Peacekeeping Operations (PKO) accountsFMF, IMET, PKO, and, while it was active, the Pakistan Counterinsurgency Capability Fund (PCCF). These programs are implemented by the Department of Defense, meaning it allocates countries’ assistance levels and determines the equipment that is permitted for transfer. DOD implements these programs. Police training programs have traditionally been the responsibility of the International Narcotics and Law Enforcement (INL) Office in the State Department, though DOD also ran programs in Iraq and Afghanistan were implemented and paid for by the Department of Defense for several years.
State is also the organizational home to the Office of U.S. Foreign Assistance Resources (formerly the Office of the Director of Foreign Assistance), which was created in 2006 to coordinate U.S. foreign assistance programs. The office establishes standard program structures and definitions, as well as performance indicators, and collects and reports data on State Department and USAID aid programs.
The State Department implemented about $7.360 billion in foreign assistance funding in FY2018, FY2019, though it has policy authority over a much broader range of assistance funds.20
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services implements a range of global health programs through its various component institutions. As an implementing partner in the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), a large portion of HHS foreign assistance activities are related to HIV prevention and treatment, including technical support and preventing mother to child transmission of HIV/AIDS. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) participates in a broad range of global disease control activity, including rapid outbreak response, global research and surveillance, information technology assistance, and field epidemiology and laboratory training. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) also conduct international health research that is reported as assistance.
In FY2018, HHS institutions implemented $2.12 billion in foreign assistance activities.21
The Department of the Treasury's Under Secretary for International Affairs administers U.S. contributions to and participation in the World Bank and other multilateral development institutions. Presidentially appointed U.S. executive directors at each of the banks represent the United States' point of view. Treasury also deals with foreign debt reduction issues and programs, including U.S. participation in the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative. The agency manages the distribution of funds and negotiates program structure, but does not implement programs. Treasury, however, does directly implement a bilateral technical assistance program offering temporary financial advisors to countries implementing major economic reforms and combating terrorist finance activity.
For FY2018, the Department of the Treasury managed foreign assistance valued at about $1.56 billion.22
Created in February Millennium Challenge Corporation
Created in 2004, the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) seeks to concentrate significantly higher amounts of U.S. resources in a provides large direct grants to a few low- and lower-middle-income countries that have demonstrated a strong commitment to political, economic, and social reformseffective governance relative to other developing countries. A significant feature of the MCC effort MCC grants is that recipient countries formulate, propose, and implement mutually agreed five-year U.S.-funded project plansgrants, known as compacts. Compacts in the 2729 recipient countries selected to date have emphasized infrastructure projects. The MCC is a U.S. government corporation, headed by a chief executive officer who reports to a board of directors chaired by the Secretary of State. The Corporation maintains a relatively small staff of about 300.
The MCC obligated about $615.3646.5 million in FY2018.23
A number of other government agencies play a role in implementing foreign aid programs.
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Source: USAID Explorer and CRS calculations. |
Most U.S. assistance is now provided as a grant rather than a loan, so as not to increase the heavy
Figure 3. Assistance by Type, FY2019
the debt burden carried by many developing
Obligations
countries. However, the forms a grant may take are diverse. The most common type of U.S. development aid is project-based assistance (77% in FY2018FY2019), in which aid is channeled through an implementing partner, most often a contractor, multilateral organization, or nongovernmental organization, to complete a specific project. Aid is also provided in the form of core contributions to international organizations such as the United Nations, technical assistance, and direct budget support (cash transfer) to governments. A portion of aid money isSome assistance funds are also spent on administrative costs ((see Figure 3). Within these categories, aid
may take many forms, as described below.
Source: Foreignassistance.gov and CRS calculations.
Expertise
Many assistance programs provide expert advice to government and private sector organizations. For example, the Department of the Treasury, USAID, and U.S.-funded multilateral banks all place specialists in host government ministries to make recommendations on policy reforms in a wide variety of sectors. USAID has often placed experts in private sector business and civic 34 For more information on the BUILD Act and DFC, see CRS Report R45461, BUILD Act: Frequently Asked Questions About the New U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar and Marian L. Lawson, and CRS In Focus IF11436, U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar and Nick M. Brown.
35 For more information, see CRS In Focus IF11436, U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), by Shayerah I. Akhtar and Nick M. Brown.
36 ForeignAssistance.gov.
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may take many forms, as described below.
Transfer of knowledge and skills is a significant part of most assistance programs. The International Military Education and Training Program (IMET), for example, provides training to officers of the military forces of allied and friendly nations. Tens of thousands of citizens of aid recipient countries receive short-term technical training or longer-term degree training annually under USAID programs. More than one-quarter of Peace Corps volunteers are English, math, and science teachers, and also fall into this category. Other aid programs provide law enforcement personnel with anti-narcotics or anti-terrorism training.
Many assistance programs provide expert advice to government and private sector organizations. For example, the Department of the Treasury, USAID, and U.S.-funded multilateral banks all place specialists in host government ministries to make recommendations on policy reforms in a wide variety of sectors. USAID has often placed experts in private sector business and civic organizations to help strengthen them in their formative years or while indigenous staff are being trained. Such expert advice may come from U.S. nationals, but may also include country nationals employed by USAID projects to offer policy options to that government or otherwise coordinate project efforts.
Training
Knowledge and skill transfer is a significant part of most assistance programs. The International Military Education and Training Program (IMET), for example, provides training to officers of the armed forces of allied and friendly nations. Tens of thousands of citizens of aid recipient countries receive technical training annually under USAID programs. Similarly, more than one-quarter of Peace Corps volunteers are English, math, and science teachers. Other aid programs provide law enforcement personnel with anti-narcotics or anti-terrorism training.
Grants
trained. While most of these experts are U.S. nationals, in Russia, USAID funded the development of locally staffed political and economic think tanks to offer policy options to that government.
USAID, the Inter-American Foundation, and the African Development Foundation often provide aid in the form of grants directly to local organizations to foster economic and social development and to encourage civic engagement in their communities. Grants are sometimes provided to microcredit organizationscredit institutions, such as village-level women'’s savings groups, which in turn provide loans to microentrepreneurs. Small grants may also address specific community needs. Recent IAF grants, for example, have supported organizations that help resettle Salvadoran migrants deported from the United States and youth programs in Central America aimed at gang prevention.
Assistance may be provided in the form of food commodities, weapons systems, or equipment such as generators or computers. Food aid may be provided directly to meet humanitarian needs or to encourage attendance at a maternal/child health care program. Weapons supplied under the military assistance program may include training in their use. Equipment and commodities provided under development assistanceTechnical assistance may accompany goods provided, such as training for use of weapons supplied as military assistance. Under development assistance, equipment and commodities provided are usually integrated with other forms of aid to meet objectives in a particular social or economic sector. For instance, textbooks have been provided in both Afghanistan and Iraq alongside a broader teacher training and educational reform effort. Computers may be offered in conjunction with training and expertise to fledgling microcredit institutions. Since PEPFAR was first authorized in 2004, antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) provided to individuals living with HIV/AIDS have been a significant component of global health assistance.
Although once a significant portion of U.S. assistance programs, direct construction of economic infrastructure—roads, irrigation systems, electric power facilities, etc.—has been a relatively small component of aid efforts aftersince the 1970s. Because of the substantial expense of these projects, they were to be found only in large bilateral assistance programs, such as that for Egypt in the 1980s and 1990s, where the United States constructed major urban water and sanitation systems. The aid programs implemented in support of post-U.S. invasion reconstruction in Iraq and Afghanistan were an exception, supporting the building of schools, health clinics, roads, power plants, and irrigation systems. In Iraq alone, more than $10 billion went to economic infrastructure. The Millennium Challenge Corporation now oversees much of this economic infrastructure portfoliofunds much of the direct construction of
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economic infrastructure supported by U.S. assistance, using a competitive selection process to direct such programs toward well-governed countries in which these investments may be more sustainable.
Although it is the exception rather than the rule, some countries receive aid in the form of a cash grant to the government. Dollars provided in this way support a government'’s balance-of-payments situation, enabling it to purchase more U.S. goods, service its debt, or devote more domestic revenues to developmental or other purposes. Cash transfers have been made as a reward to countries that have supported the United States'U.S. counterterrorism operations (Turkey and Jordan in FY2004), to provide political and strategic support (both Egypt and Israel annually for decades after the 1979 Camp David Peace Accord), and in exchange for undertaking difficult political and economic reforms.
Under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, the President may determine the terms and conditions under which most forms of assistance are provided, though Congress included provisions encouraging the use of grants over loans in some instances, such as development assistance to the least developed countries. In general, the financial condition of a country—its ability to meet repayment obligations—has been an important criterion of the decision to provide a loan or grant. Some programs, such as humanitarian and disaster relief programs, were designed from the beginning to be entirely grant activities.
Between 1946 and 2018, the United States loaned $115.5116.6 billion in foreign economic and military aid to foreign governments, and while most foreign aid is now provided through grants, $11.0 billion in loans to foreign governments$11.2 billion of loan funds remained outstanding at the end of FY2018.31
During the past two decades, nearly all foreign aid—military as well as economic—has been provided in grant form. While loans represented 32% of total military and economic assistance between 1962 and 1988, this figure declined substantially beginning in the mid-1980s, until by FY2001, loans represented less than 1% of total aid appropriations. The de-emphasis on loan programs came largely in response to the debt problems of developing countries, some of which waswere attributable to aid loans. Both Congress and the executive branch have generally supportedtaken the 37 U.S. Overseas Loans and Grants: Obligations and Loan Authorizations, July 1, 1945-September 30, 2019 (Greenbook), CONG-R-0105. For nearly three decades, Section 620q of the Foreign Assistance Act (the Brooke amendment) has prohibited new assistance to the government of any country that falls more than one year past due in servicing its debt obligations to the United States, though the President may waive application of this prohibition if he determines it is in the national interest.
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the view that foreign aid should not add to the already existing debt burden carried by these countries. The Trump Administration has sought to shift that approach to some degree, encouraging the use of loans over grants for Foreign Military Financing assistance in successive budget requests, but Congress has not supported such a change.
Although a small proportion of total current aid, there are significant USAID-managed programs that guarantee loansbut Congress continued its emphasis on grants.38
Development Finance
Although a small proportion of total current aid, U.S. government-issued financial products to advance development, known broadly as “development finance,” have remained a component of U.S. assistance efforts. Now largely consolidated in the DFC, such projects involve either directly issued loans or loan guarantees, meaning the U.S. government agrees to pay a portion of the amount owed in the case of a default on a loan. For instance, DFC may partially guarantee a mortgage portfolio of a developing country bank, sharing risk with it in order to expand credit access for poor mortgage holders.
The United States also guarantees sovereign loans of certain governments in orderamount owed in the case of a default on a loan. A Development Credit Authority (DCA) loan guarantee, for example, in which risk is shared with a private sector bank, can be used to increase access to finance in support of any development sector. The DCA was transferred from USAID and merged with the former Overseas Private Investment Corporation to form the new DFC in 2019 (P.L. 115-254) to enhance U.S. development finance capacity. The DFC has authority to provide loan guarantees as well.
USAID has also provided loan guarantees in recent years to improve the terms or amounts of financing from international capital markets for Ukraine. Debt guarantees have been used recently to assist Ukraine, Iraq, and Jordan. In these cases, assistance funds representing a fraction of the guarantee amount are set aside to cover possible default.3239 Previously, under the Israeli Loan Guarantee Program, the United States guaranteed repayment of loans made by commercial sources to support the costs of immigrants settling in Israel from other countries and maycould issue guarantees to support economic recovery.33
The United States has also forgiven some debts owed by foreign governments and encouraged, with mixed success, other foreign aid donors and international financial institutions to do likewise. In some cases, the decision to forgive foreign aid debts has been based largely on economic grounds as another means to support development efforts by heavily indebted, but reform-minded, countries. The United States has been one of the strongest supporters of the Heavily Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) Initiative and the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI). These initiatives, which began in the late 1990s, include participation of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and other international financial institutions in a comprehensive debt workout framework for the world'’s poorest and most debt-strapped nations.34
41 USAID and the Treasury Department have also implemented “debt-for-nature” swaps, in which foreign debt is purchased, sometimes at discounted rates, and restructured into local currency that can be implemented as environmental conservation programs.42
The largest and most hotly debated debt forgiveness actions have been implemented for much broader foreign policy reasons with a more strategic purpose. Examples include Poland, during its transition from a communist system and centrally planned economy (1990—$2.46 billion); Egypt, for making peace with Israel and helping maintain the Arab coalition during the Persian
38 The Trump Administration both proposed shifting FMF from primarily grants to include some lending, and sought to expand development finance through the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation while proposing cuts to grant assistance accounts.
39 The assistance provided to guarantee the loan varies depending on the risk. For example, the Obama Administration requested $275 million in ESF-OCO funds in FY2016 to support a $1 billion loan guarantee for Ukraine.
40 Israel has not drawn on any loan guarantees since FY2004. 41 For more information on these programs, see CRS Report RS21482, The Paris Club and International Debt Relief, by Martin A. Weiss.
42 CRS Report RL31286, Debt-for-Nature Initiatives and the Tropical Forest Conservation Act (TFCA): Status and Implementation, by Pervaze A. Sheikh.
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Egypt, for making peace with Israel and helping maintain the Arab coalition during the Persian Gulf War (1990—$7 billion); and Jordan, after signing a peace accord with Israel (1994—$700 million), are examples. Similarly, the United States forgave about $4.1 billion in outstanding Saddam Hussein-era Iraqi debt in November 2004 and helped negotiate an 80% reduction in Iraq'’s debt to creditor nations later that month.
Does the Private Sector Have a Role in Foreign Assistance? nations later that month.
Most development and humanitarian assistance activities are not directly implemented by U.S. government personnel but by private sector entities, such as individual personal service contractors, consulting firms, universities, private voluntary organizations (PVOs), or public international organizations (PIOs). Generally speaking, U.S. government foreign service and civil servants determine the direction and priorities of the aid program, allocate funds while keeping withinin accordance with legislative requirements, ensure that appropriate projects are in place to meet aid objectives, select implementers, and monitor the implementation of those projects for effectiveness and financial accountability. Both USAID and the State Department have promoted the use of public-private partnerships, in which private entities such as corporations and foundations are contributing partnerscontribute as joint funders, not paid implementers, in situations where businesspartners’ interests and developmentU.S. objectives coincide.3543 As foreign direct investment in developing countries has increased significantly in recent decades, far exceeding foreign assistance from governments in many countries, agencies have sought partnerships and other means of channeling those investments in support of U.S. development priorities.
In FY2018, the United States provided some form of bilateral foreign assistance to more than 180 countries.3645 Aid is concentrated heavily in certain countries, reflecting the priorities and interests of United States foreign policy at the timebut country allocations shift over time due to changing priorities and interests of U.S. foreign policy. Table 2 identifies the top 15 recipients of U.S. foreign assistance for FY1998, FY2008 and FY2018, to show shifts in priority countries over time.
Table 2. Top Recipients of U.S. Foreign Assistance from All Sources, FY1998, FY2008, and FY2018
FY1999, FY2009, and FY2019, reflecting these shifts.
43 For more on the use of public-private partnerships in foreign assistance, see CRS Report R41880, Foreign Assistance: Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs), by Marian L. Lawson.
44 22 C.F.R. § 228. 45 Generally, USAID and other agencies funnel development assistance, in various forms, to a country’s private sector, nongovernmental organizations, local communities, individual entrepreneurs, and other entities. Assistance is provided directly to the government of a country where the intention is to bring about policy reforms, improve governance, or work with a sector in which the government is the predominant element, such as in health care where the Ministry of Health would play a determinative role. Often, in cases where a government is believed to be taking action contrary to U.S. interests, Congress has specified that assistance to that government be prohibited or limited, while not affecting overall assistance to the country.
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Table 2. Top Recipients of U.S. Foreign Assistance from All Sources,
FY1999, FY2009, and FY2019
(in millions of current U.S. dollars)
FY1999
FY2009
FY2019
Israel
3,030.4
Afghanistan
8,964.4
Afghanistan
4,893.4
Egypt
2,214.0
Iraq
5,694.4
Israel
3,308.5
Russia
1,601.8
Israel
2,423.3
Jordan
1,723.3
Jordan
381.9
Egypt
1,989.9
Egypt
1,467.0
Colombia
325.5
Pakistan
1,174.2
Iraq
959.3
Ukraine
287.8
Sudan
1,156.8
Ethiopia
922.8
Indonesia
256.7
West Bank and Gaza
1,040.3
Yemen
809.8
Peru
231.3
Ethiopia
865.1
Colombia
800.7
Bangladesh
229.7
Colombia
863.6
Nigeria
794.0
Bosnia and
Herzegovina
220.6
Jordan
828.3
Lebanon
791.0
Serbia and
Montenegro
190.2
Kenya
770.1
DRC
781.1
India
186.7
Georgia
621.9
Kenya
758.9
Dem. Rep. of Korea
176.5
South Africa
591.2
Uganda
753.9
Ethiopia
144.7
Russia
535.9
Pakistan
684.8
Bolivia
139.6
Burkina Faso
503.9
South Sudan
675.5
Source: Foreignassistance.gov. (in millions of current U.S. dollars)
FY1998 |
FY2008 |
FY2018 |
|||||
Israel |
3,081.6 |
Afghanistan |
8,858.3 |
Afghanistan |
5,957.8 |
||
Egypt |
2,135.6 |
Iraq |
7,517.2 |
Israel |
3,128.4 |
||
Russia |
392.1 |
Israel |
2,425.5 |
Jordan |
1,652.4 |
||
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
317.0 |
Egypt |
1,609.4 |
Egypt |
1,247.9 |
||
Ukraine |
277.8 |
Russia |
1,439.9 |
Iraq |
1,180.9 |
||
Peru |
191.0 |
Sudan (former) |
1,028.2 |
Ethiopia |
875.7 |
||
Poland |
165.0 |
Tanzania |
1,013.3 |
Syria |
835.1 |
||
Jordan |
159.2 |
Ethiopia |
927.5 |
Kenya |
829.2 |
||
India |
131.8 |
Pakistan |
872.9 |
Nigeria |
822.1 |
||
Bolivia |
119.9 |
Colombia |
863.5 |
South Sudan |
789.1 |
||
Colombia |
115.9 |
Mozambique |
750.9 |
Somalia |
742.2 |
||
Bangladesh |
110.3 |
Morocco |
724.8 |
Uganda |
729.4 |
||
Ethiopia |
109.9 |
Jordan |
629.7 |
Lebanon |
725.8 |
||
Indonesia |
101.2 |
West Bank/Gaza |
511.7 |
DRC |
706.6 |
||
Haiti |
100.1 |
Kenya |
463.3 |
Yemen |
648.4 |
Source: USAID Explorer.
Note: DRC = Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Note: DRC = Democratic Republic of the Congo.
As shown in the table above, there are both similarities and sharp differences among country aid recipients for the three periods. The most consistent thread connecting the top aid recipients over the past two decades has been continuing U.S. strategic interests in the Middle East, with large programs maintained for Israel and Egypt as well as for Iraq, following the 2003 invasion. Two key countries in thefor U.S. counterterrorism strategy, Afghanistan and Pakistan, made their first appearances on the list in FY2002. Of the two, only Afghanistan remains among the top recipients in FY2018.
In FY1998rose to the top of the aid recipient list in FY2002.
Since 2000, U.S. assistance has shifted considerably, as some poor or fragile regions have prospered and others remain impoverished. In FY1999, one sub-Saharan African country appeared among leadingthe top 15 aid recipients; in FY2018, seven of the 15 are sub-Saharan AfricanFY2019, there were six. Many are focus countries under the PEPFAR initiative to address the HIV/AIDS epidemic; newer initiatives such as Power Africa, Feed the Future, and InvestProsper Africa have also driven funds there. In FY1998, three to that region. In FY1999, four countries from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union made the list, as many from the region had for much of the 1990s, representing the effort due to efforts to transform the former communist nations to democratic societies and market-oriented economies. None of those countries appear in the FY2018FY2019 list. In FY1997, fourFY1999, three Latin American countries make the list; no countries from the region appear in FY2018.
made the list; Colombia is the only country from the region that remained on the list for FY2019.
On a regional basis, the Middle East/North Africa (MENA) region has received the largest share of U.S. foreign assistance for manyseveral decades. Although economic aid to the region'’s top two recipients, Israel and Egypt, began to decline in the late 1990s, the dominant share of bilateral
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U.S. assistance consumed by the MENA region was maintained in FY2005 by the war in Iraq. Despite the continued importance of the region, its share continued to slip substantially through FY2018 as the effort to train and equip Iraqi forces diminished.
U.S. strategic imperatives have also driven periodic growth and decline of aid. After September 11, 2001, South and Central Asia emerged as a significant target of U.S. assistance, rising. The region rose from a roughly 34% share 20 years ago to 23% in FY2008 butFY2009 before retreating to 1714% in FY2018FY2019, largely tracking U.S. national security priorities in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Similarly, the share represented byflowing to African nations has increased from 109% in FY1998 to 19% in FY2008, and reaching 26% in FY2018FY1999 to 20% in FY2009, and reached 25% in FY2019, largely due to the HIV/AIDS initiative that funnels resources mostly to African countries and to a range of other efforts to address the region'’s development challenges. Meanwhile, the share of aid to Europe/Eurasia, which greatly surpassed that of Africa in FY1998, FY1999, has declined significantly in the past decade, to about 4% in FY2018FY2019, with the graduation of many East European aid recipients and the termination of programs in Russia. The share of aid allocated to East Asia/Pacific has remained at a low level during the past two decades, while the Western Hemisphere'’s share has risen and fallen based on U.S. interest in Colombia and Central American countries, and disasters such as the 2010 earthquake in Haiti (see Figure 4).
There are several methods commonly used for measuring the amount of federal spending on foreign assistance. Amounts can be expressed in terms of budget authority (funds appropriated by Congress), obligations (amounts contractually committed), and outlays or disbursements (money actually spent). Assistance levels are also sometimes measured as a percentage of the total federal budget, as a percentage of total discretionary budget authority (excluding mandatory and entitlement programs), or as a percentage of the gross domestic product (GDP) (, for an indication of the national wealth allocated to foreign aid). By nearly all of these measures, foreign aid resources fell gradually on average over several decades sincefrom the historical high levels of the late
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1940s and early 1950s (see Appendix A). This downward trend was sporadically interrupted, largely due to major foreign policy initiatives such as the Alliance for Progress for Latin America beginning in 1961, the Vietnam War in the 1960s and 1970s, the infusion of funds to implement the Camp David Middle East Peace Accords in 1979, and an increase in military assistance to Egypt, Turkey, Greece and others in the mid-1980s. The lowest point in U.S. foreign aid spending since World War II came in FY1997, when foreign assistance obligations fell to just aboveabout $20 billion (in 20182019 dollar terms).
While foreign aid consistently represented just over 1% of U.S. annual gross domestic productGDP in the decade following World War II, it fell gradually to between 0.2% and 0.4% for most years inover the past three decades. Foreign assistance spending has comprised, on average, around 3% of discretionary budget authority and just over 1% of total budget authority each year since FY1977, though the percentages have sometimes varied considerably from year to year. Foreign aid dropped from 5% of discretionary budget authority in FY1979 to 2.4% in FY2001, before rising sharply in conjunction with U.S. activities in Afghanistan and Iraq starting in FY2003 (see, as well as the launch of a global HIV/AIDS response effort (see Figure 5; Appendix A).
As previously discussed, since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, foreign aid funding has been closely tied to U.S. counterterrorism strategy, particularly in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. President George W. Bush and Obama Administration globalGlobal health initiatives, the creation of the Millennium Challenge Corporation, and growth in counter-narcotics activities have driven funding increases as wellover the same period. The Budget Control Act of 2011, and the drawdown of U.S. military forces in Iraq, and to some degree Afghanistan, led to a notable dip in aid obligations in FY2013, but aid levels have risen againrose again in FY2015 with efforts to address the crisis in Syria, counter-ISIL ISIS activities, and provide for humanitarian aidefforts. The use of the Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO, discussed below) designation has enabled this growthgrowth. Figure 6 shows how trends in foreign aid funding in recent decades trackdecades can be attributed to specific foreign policy events and presidential initiatives.
Congress and the Administration distinguish between enduring (also referred to as base, regular, or ongoing), emergency supplemental, and OCO funds. Funds designated as emergency or OCO are not subject to procedural limits on discretionary spending in congressional budget resolutions, or the statutory discretionary spending limits provided by the Budget Control Act of 2011 for FY2011-FY2021 (BCA, P.L. 112-25).
Prior to FY2012, the President typically submitted to Congress requests for additional funding as needed (after initial annual budget requests), referred to as emergency supplementals. These funding packages historically were approved to address emergency, war-related, or otherwise off-cycle budget needs. The Obama Administration took a different approach in its FY2012 international affairs budget, distinguishing between enduring (also referred to as base, regular, or ongoing), emergency supplemental, and Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) funds, all in the same request, and describing the OCO designated fundscycle budget needs.
In contrast to emergency supplemental appropriations, the Obama Administration included an OCO request within its regular budget request in FY2012 for what it described as short-term, temporary, war-related funding for the frontline states of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. The OCO designation had previously been applied to war-related Department of Defense (DOD) costs but had not yet been used outside that scope.
Funds designated as emergency or OCO are not subject to procedural limits on discretionary spending in congressional budget resolutions, or the statutory discretionary spending limits provided by the Budget Control Act of 2011 for FY2011-FY2021 (BCA, P.L. 112-25). As a result, the OCO designation became a critical tool for compliance with the BCA spending caps. Congress not only adopted the OCO designation in the FY2012 SFOPS appropriations legislation, but expanded it to include funding for additional accounts and countries. In every fiscal year sinceBetween FY2012 and FY2018, Congress has appropriated more OCO-designated funding than has beenwas requested by the Administration; since then, Congress has appropriated OCO funds each year despite Administration requests for no SFOPS OCO fundsby the Administration (see Figure 7).
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Figure 7).
Figure 7. Overseas Contingency Operations, FY2012- FY2021 (in billions of current U.S. dollars) |
![]() |
Sources: SFOPS Congressional Budget Justifications; annual SFOPS appropriations. |
As the use of OCO expanded, the Administration requested and Congress enacted fewer emergency supplementals. However, there have been a handful of foreign assistance supplementals since FY2012 to address unanticipated emergency situations. These include supplementals for the Ebola response in West Africa in FY2015, the Zika response in FY2016, and counter-ISIS activities in FY2017. Most recently, the Trump Administration requested and Congress enacted supplemental funds to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, provide assistance to Sudan, and address humanitarian needs in Afghanistan and for Afghan refugees.
The BCA expired at the end of FY2021, and the House-passed and Senate-introduced SFOPS bills for FY2022 (H.R. 4373 and S. 3075, respectively) do not include OCO funds.46
How Much Foreign Assistance Is Spent on U.S. Goods and Services? Congress historically sought to enhance the domestic benefits of foreign aid by requiring that most U.S. foreign aid be used to procure U.S. goods and services.47 The conditioning of aid on
46 For more information on foreign affairs OCO funding, see CRS In Focus IF10143, Foreign Affairs Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Funding: Background and Current Status, by Emily M. Morgenstern. For broader OCO trends, including those related to DOD, see CRS Report R44519, Overseas Contingency Operations Funding: Background and Status, by Brendan W. McGarry and Emily M. Morgenstern.
47 The “Buy America” provision of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (P.L. 87-195, §604), originally required that aid procurement be made within the United States unless a detailed determination of the need to procure elsewhere was made by the President. In FY1993, Congress amended this section to allow for procurement in the United States, the recipient country, or any developing country, but in developed countries only if necessary.
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the procurement of goods and services from the donor-country is sometimes called “tied aid,” and combat the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).
With the BCA expiring at the end of FY2021, the future of OCO is unclear. The Trump Administration has indicated its preference to phase out SFOPS OCO; in its FY2019, FY2020, and FY2021 budget requests, the Administration did not request OCO funding within the international affairs budget, but did request OCO funding for DOD, including for DOD aid accounts. Congress used the OCO designation for both DOD and SFOPS accounts in its final appropriations for FY2019 (P.L. 116-6) and FY2020 (P.L. 116-94), but at lower levels compared to prior fiscal years. It remains to be seen whether this is the beginning of a downward trend in OCO use for foreign aid.37
Congress historically sought to enhance the domestic benefits of foreign aid by requiring that most U.S. foreign aid be used to procure U.S. goods and services.38 The conditioning of aid on the procurement of goods and services from the donor-country is sometimes called "tied aid," and while quite common for much of the history of modern foreign assistance, it has become increasingly disfavored in the international community.3948 Studies have shown that tying aid increases the costs of goods and services by 15%-30% on average, and up to 40% for food aid, reducing the overall effectivenesspurchasing power of aid flows.4049 The United States joined other donor nations in committing to reduce tied aid in the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness in March 2005, and the portion of tied aid from all donors fell from 70% of total bilateral development assistance in 1985 to about 20% in 2018. However, an estimated 40% of U.S. bilateral development assistance was tied in 2018, the highest percentage among major donors, perhaps reflecting the perception of policymakers that maintaining public and political support for foreign aid programs requires ensuring direct economic benefit to the United States.4150 About 67% of U.S. foreign assistance funds in FY2018 were obligated to U.S.-based entities.42
51
A considerable amount of U.S. foreign assistance funds remainfunding remains in the United States, through domestic procurement or the use of U.S. implementers, but the portion differs by program and is hard to identify with any accuracy. For some types of aid, the legislative requirements or program design make it relatively easy to determine how much aid is spent on U.S. goods or services, while for others, this is more difficult to determine.
In addition to the direct benefits derived from aid dollars used for American goods and services, many argue that the foreign aid program brings significant indirect financial benefits to the United States. For example, analysts maintain that provision of military equipment through the military assistance programU.S. military equipment and food commodities commodities through the Food for Peace Act, Title II program helps to develop future, strictly commercial, markets for those products. More broadly, as countries develop economically, they are in a position to purchase more goods from abroad and the United States benefits as a trade partner. Since an increasing majority of global consumers are outside of the United States, some business leaders assert that establishing strong economic and trade ties in the developing world, using foreign assistance as a tool, is key to U.S. economic and job growth.46
Since World War II, with the exception of several years between 1989 and 2001, during which Japan ranked first among aid donors, the United States has led the developed countries in net disbursements of economic aid, or "“Official Development Assistance (ODA)"” as defined by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development'’s (OECD'’s) Development Assistance Committee (DAC).47 In 201856 In 2019, the most recent year for which comprehensive data are available, the United States disbursed $33.7932.98 billion in ODA, or about 2022.5% of the $169.98146.52 billion in total net ODA disbursements by all donors that year, as reported to the OECD, ranking first among donors (see Figure 8). While the top five donors have not varied for more than a decade, there have been shifts lower down the ranking. For example, Turkey has become a much more prominent ODA donor in recent years (ranked 6th in 2016, with $8.61 billion in ODA, compared to 21st in 2006), reflecting large amounts of humanitarian aid to assist Syrian refugees.48
|
![]() |
Source: OECD/DAC, data available at http://www.oecd.org/dac/financing-sustainable-development/development-finance-data/statisticsonresourceflowstodevelopingcountries.htm |
Even as.
Although it leads in dollar amounts of aid flows to developing countries, the United States often ranks low when aid is calculated as a percentage of gross national income (GNI).4958 This calculation is often cited in the context of international donor forums, as a level of 0.7% GNI was established as a target for donors inthe U.N. General Assembly set a target for donors of 0.7% of GNI in 1970, which also became an aim of the 2000 U.N. Millennium Development Goals. In 2017 (the most recent comprehensive data available)2019, the United States ranked at the bottom among long-standing donors in terms of aid as a portion of GNI, at 0.15%. Turkey, Luxembourg, Norway, and Sweden ranked first among donors, each at about 1% of GNI.
, the United States ranked at the bottom among major donors at 0.18% of GNI. The United Arab Emirates, which has significantly increased its reported ODA in recent years, ranked first among top donors at 1.03% of GNI, followed by Sweden at 1.02% and Luxembourg at 1.00%.
There has also been increased interest in China's activities in developing countries, though China is not an OECD member and does not regularly report ODA disbursements. TheNevertheless, the OECD estimates that China'’s international development co-operation reached $4.8 billion in 20172019, up from $3.64.5 billion in 20162018, including $2.31.6 billion in multilateral assistance.5059 While estimated Chinese ODA is still relatively small compared to that of major donor countries, policymakers are paying increasing attention to growing Chinese investments and financing in developing countries that do not meet the ODA definition. China has touted its "“Belt and Road" ” Initiative as an effort to boost economic development and connectivity from China across regions to create "“strategic propellers"” for its own development.51 However, China has provided little official 60 China has provided little official
58 Gross National Income (GNI) comprises GDP together with income received from other countries (notably interest and dividends), less similar payments made to other countries.
59 From “Other official providers not reporting to the OECD” report on the OECD website at https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/18b00a44-en/index.html?itemId=/content/component/5e331623-en&_csp_=b14d4f60505d057b456dd1730d8fcea3&itemIGO=oecd&itemContentType=chapter#section-d1e19813. See also CRS In Focus IF11735, China’s “One Belt, One Road” Initiative: Economic Issues, by Karen M. Sutter, Andres B. Schwarzenberg, and Michael D. Sutherland.
60 National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Ministry of Commerce of the People’s Republic of China (PRC), “Vision and Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road,” First Edition, March 2015, http://en.ndrc.gov.cn/newsrelease/201503/t20150330_669367.html.
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aggregate information on the initiative, including on the number of projects, the amounts and terms of financing, and metrics for success.
Numerous congressional authorizing committees and appropriations subcommittees maintain responsibility for U.S. foreign assistance. Several committees have responsibility for authorizing legislation establishing programs and policy and for conducting oversight of foreign aid programs. In the Senate, the Committee on Foreign Relations, and in the House, the Committee on Foreign Affairs, have primary jurisdiction over bilateral development assistance, political/strategic and other economic security assistance, military assistance, and international organizations. Responsibility over food aid, which primarily lies with the Agriculture Committees in both bodies, is periodically shared with the House Foreign Affairs Committee in the Houseand Senate Foreign Relations Committees. U.S. contributions to multilateral development banks are within the jurisdiction of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the House Financial Services Committee. The large nontraditional aid Aid programs funded by DOD, such as Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction programs and the military aid programs in Afghanistan and Iraq, Ukraine, generally come under the jurisdiction of the Armed Services Committees. Some global health assistance, such as research and other activities done by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, may fall under the jurisdiction of the House Energy and Commerce and Senate HELP committees.
Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) committees.
Most foreign aid appropriations fall under the jurisdiction of the SFOPS Subcommittees, with food assistance appropriated by the Agriculture Subcommittees. As noted earlier, however, certain military, global health, and other activities that have been reported as foreign aid have been appropriated through other subcommittees in recent years, including the Defense and the Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies subcommittees. (For current information on SFOPS Appropriations legislation, see CRS Report R45763R46935, Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs: FY2020FY2022 Budget and Appropriations, by Cory R. Gill, Marian L. Lawson, and Emily M. Morgenstern.)
The most significant permanent foreign aid authorization laws include
62
In the past, Congress usually scheduled debates every two years on omnibus foreign aid legislation that amended these permanent authorization measures. Congress has not enacted into law a comprehensive foreign assistance authorization measure since 1985, although foreign aid authorizing bills have passed the House or Senate, or both, on numerous occasions. Foreign aid bills have frequently stalled at some point in the debate because of controversial issues, a tight legislative calendar, or executive-legislative foreign policy disputes.5363 In contrast, DOD assistance is authorized in annual National Defense Authorization legislation.
In lieu of approving a broad State Department/USAID authorization bill, comprehensive foreign assistance authorization bills on a regular basis, Congress has on occasion authorized major foreign assistance initiatives for specific regions, countries, or aid sectors in stand-alone legislation or within an appropriation bill, often involving amendments to the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 to authorize a new initiative. Among these are the following:
).
In the absence of regular enactment of foreign aid authorization bills, appropriation measures considered annually within the SFOPS spending bill have assumed greater significance for Congress in influencing U.S. foreign aid policy. Not only do appropriations bills set spending levels each year for nearly every foreign assistance account, SFOPS appropriations also incorporate new policy initiatives that would otherwise be debated and enacted as part of authorizing legislation.
62 Separate permanent authorizations exist for other specific foreign aid programs such as the Peace Corps, the Millennium Challenge Corporation, the Inter-American Foundation, and the African Development Foundation.
63 A few foreign aid programs that are authorized in other legislation have received more regular legislative review. Authorizing legislation for voluntary contributions to international organizations and refugee programs, for example, are usually contained in omnibus Foreign Relations Authorization measures that also address State Department and public diplomacy issues. Food aid and amendments to the Food for Peace Act (P.L.480) are usually considered in the omnibus “farm bill” that Congress reauthorizes every five years. The most recent farm bill was signed into law as P.L. 115-334 on December 20, 2018.
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Appendix A. Data Table
Table A-1. Foreign Aid Funding Trends (Obligations)
As %
As % of
Fiscal
Constant 2019
of
As % of total
discretionary
Year
Current U.S. $
U.S. $
GDP
budget authoritya
budget authoritya
1946
3,075,702,000
33,099,851,370
1.3%
—
—
1947
6,708,001,000
65,089,024,366
2.8%
—
—
1948
3,179,504,000
28,177,070,122
1.2%
—
—
1949
8,300,704,000
71,150,699,078
3.0%
—
—
1950
5,971,296,000
51,895,822,882
2.1%
—
—
1951
7,612,560,000
62,810,601,440
2.3%
—
—
1952
6,813,953,000
54,040,702,008
1.9%
—
—
1953
4,979,870,000
38,783,668,999
1.3%
—
—
1954
4,767,778,000
36,699,816,125
1.2%
—
—
1955
4,097,382,000
31,303,775,797
1.0%
—
—
1956
4,847,691,000
36,104,061,584
1.1%
—
—
1957
4,871,415,000
34,983,354,460
1.1%
—
—
1958
4,014,661,000
27,990,624,675
0.8%
—
—
1959
5,074,241,000
34,838,165,027
1.0%
—
—
1960
5,218,274,000
35,330,950,867
1.0%
—
—
1961
5,480,911,000
36,624,079,103
1.0%
—
—
1962
6,532,295,000
43,213,052,667
1.1%
—
—
1963
6,384,723,000
41,745,694,662
1.0%
—
—
1964
5,265,148,000
33,990,731,586
0.8%
—
—
1965
5,420,680,000
34,402,351,746
0.8%
—
—
1966
6,904,358,000
42,898,569,108
0.9%
—
—
1967
6,339,162,000
38,225,316,812
0.8%
—
—
1968
6,757,250,000
39,374,110,636
0.8%
—
—
1969
6,639,256,000
36,999,540,622
0.7%
—
—
1970
6,513,214,000
34,453,247,727
0.6%
—
—
1971
7,792,876,000
39,229,491,286
0.7%
—
—
1972
8,986,908,000
43,190,926,227
0.7%
—
—
1973
9,428,685,000
43,421,372,425
0.7%
—
—
1974
8,479,202,000
36,451,493,025
0.6%
—
—
1975
6,886,787,000
26,836,038,330
0.4%
—
—
1976b
9,609,495,000
34,730,230,239
0.4%
1.9%
4.0%
1977
7,756,101,000
26,351,997,532
0.4%
1.7%
3.1%
1978
8,999,414,000
28,646,309,035
0.4%
1.8%
3.5%
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As %
As % of
Fiscal
Constant 2019
of
As % of total
discretionary
Year
Current U.S. $
U.S. $
GDP
budget authoritya
budget authoritya
1979
13,837,318,000
40,758,113,729
0.5%
2.5%
5.0%
1980
9,681,780,000
26,230,136,798
0.3%
1.4%
3.1%
1981
10,517,411,000
25,944,023,720
0.3%
1.4%
3.1%
1982
12,166,665,000
28,061,180,178
0.4%
1.5%
3.4%
1983
13,836,455,000
30,576,689,508
0.4%
1.6%
3.6%
1984
14,864,489,000
31,714,293,921
0.4%
1.6%
3.5%
1985
18,106,876,000
37,383,867,730
0.4%
1.8%
4.0%
1986
15,815,716,000
31,938,147,269
0.3%
1.6%
3.6%
1987
13,872,898,000
27,399,826,282
0.3%
1.3%
3.1%
1988
13,963,153,000
26,714,804,123
0.3%
1.3%
3.1%
1989
14,443,414,000
26,558,311,624
0.3%
1.2%
3.1%
1990
16,002,892,763
28,386,203,806
0.3%
1.2%
3.2%
1991
16,959,737,549
29,048,006,169
0.3%
1.2%
3.1%
1992
15,725,968,425
26,278,490,491
0.2%
1.1%
3.0%
1993
16,549,513,930
27,020,301,072
0.2%
1.1%
3.2%
1994
16,202,682,387
25,890,219,669
0.2%
1.1%
3.2%
1995
15,555,497,616
24,337,385,401
0.2%
1.0%
3.1%
1996
14,457,039,252
22,201,811,164
0.2%
0.9%
2.9%
1997
13,909,513,423
20,988,378,927
0.2%
0.8%
2.7%
1998
14,922,848,713
22,239,909,449
0.2%
0.9%
2.8%
1999
18,323,182,974
26,960,946,715
0.2%
1.0%
3.1%
2000
17,111,919,619
24,671,877,844
0.2%
0.9%
2.9%
2001
16,029,347,098
22,578,411,366
0.2%
0.8%
2.4%
2002
19,068,690,900
26,435,712,033
0.2%
0.9%
2.6%
2003
29,463,736,976
40,114,913,392
0.3%
1.3%
3.5%
2004
32,576,160,434
43,314,199,501
0.3%
1.4%
3.6%
2005
35,460,524,384
45,753,677,744
0.3%
1.4%
3.6%
2006
37,254,519,368
46,577,468,252
0.3%
1.3%
3.7%
2007
39,726,329,764
48,350,898,537
0.3%
1.4%
3.7%
2008
46,744,551,536
55,740,560,339
0.3%
1.4%
4.0%
2009
46,640,784,747
54,981,368,596
0.3%
1.1%
3.1%
2010
48,356,761,555
56,518,409,447
0.3%
1.4%
3.8%
2011
49,144,626,860
56,315,515,507
0.3%
1.4%
4.0%
2012
50,501,695,641
56,794,206,454
0.3%
1.4%
4.2%
2013
46,064,921,577
50,868,627,072
0.3%
1.3%
4.0%
2014
43,948,624,773
47,615,243,264
0.3%
1.2%
3.9%
Congressional Research Service
31
link to page 36 link to page 36 Foreign Assistance: An Introduction to U.S. Programs and Policy
As %
As % of
Fiscal
Constant 2019
of
As % of total
discretionary
Year
Current U.S. $
U.S. $
GDP
budget authoritya
budget authoritya
2015
49,951,706,109
53,500,655,202
0.3%
1.3%
4.5%
2016
49,472,834,845
52,522,561,183
0.3%
1.2%
4.2%
2017
48,120,378,957
50,195,879,533
0.2%
1.2%
3.9%
2018
47,973,217,559
48,903,807,469
0.2%
1.1%
3.4%
2019
48,181,426,929
48,181,426,929
0.2%
1.0%
3.5%
Sources: Foreignassistance.gov; Office of Management and Budget Historic Budget Tables, FY2022; CRS calculations. authorizing legislation.
Fiscal Year |
Current U.S. $ |
Constant 2018 U.S. $ |
As % of GDP |
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Sources: USAID Explorer; Office of Management and Budget Historic Budget Tables, FY2021; CRS calculations.
Notes: Budget authority data by function are not available prior to FY1976.
a. Notes: Budget authority data by function are not available prior to FY1976. a. Budget authority data is from the historic budget tables included in the President'’s annual budget
submission, and is only available back to FY1976.
b.
b. FY1976 includes both regular FY1976 and transition quarter (TQ) funding, and the GDP calculation is based
on the average FY1976 and TQ GDP.
Appendix B.
Common Foreign Assistance Abbreviations
AEECA |
Assistance to Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia |
CDC |
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention |
CERP |
Commanders Emergency Response Program |
DA |
Development Assistance |
DAC |
Development Assistance Committee of the OECD |
DFC |
U.S. International Development Finance Corporation |
DOD |
Department of Defense |
ERMA |
Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance |
ESF |
Economic Support Fund |
FAA |
Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 |
FMF |
Foreign Military Financing |
FSA |
Congressional Research Service
32
Foreign Assistance: An Introduction to U.S. Programs and Policy
Appendix B. Common Foreign Assistance Abbreviations
AEECA
Assistance to Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia
CDC
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
CERP
Commanders Emergency Response Program
DA
Development Assistance
DAC
Development Assistance Committee of the OECD
DFC
U.S. International Development Finance Corporation
DOD
Department of Defense
ERMA
Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance
ESF
Economic Support Fund
FAA
Foreign Assistance Act of 1961
FFPA
Food for Peace Act (also may be referred to as P.L. 480)
FMF
Foreign Military Financing
FSA
FREEDOM (Freedom for Russia and Emerging Eurasian Democracies and Open Markets) Support Act of 1992
GDP
Gross Domestic Product
GNI
Gross National Income
HHS
Department of Health and Human Services
HIPC
Heavily Indebted Poor Country
IBRD
World Bank, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
IDA
World Bank, International Development Association
IDA
International Disaster Assistance
IMET
International Military Education and Training
IMF
International Monetary Fund
INCLE
International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement
INL
Department of State, Office of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement
IO&P
International Organizations and Programs
MCC
Mil ennium Challenge Corporation
MDBs
Multilateral Development Banks
MDRI
Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative
MRA
Migration and Refugee Assistance
NADR
Nonproliferation, Anti-terrorism, Demining, and Related programs
NED
National Endowment for Democracy
NGO
Nongovernmental Organization
OCO
Overseas Contingency Operations
ODA
Official Development Assistance
Congressional Research Service
33
Foreign Assistance: An Introduction to U.S. Programs and Policy
OECD
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
OFDA
Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance
OGAC
Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator
OHDACA
DOD’s Overseas Humanitarian, Disaster and Civic Assistance account
OMB
Office of Management and Budget
OPIC
Overseas Private Investment Corporation
OTI
Office of Transition Initiatives
PEPFAR
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief
PKO
Peacekeeping Operations
PVO
Private Voluntary Organization
SEED
Support for East European Democracy Act of 1989
TDA
U.S. Trade and Development Agency
UNDP
United Nations Development Program
UNICEF
United Nations Children’s Fund
USAID
U.S. Agency for International Development
Author Information
Emily M. Morgenstern
Nick M. Brown
Analyst in Foreign Assistance and Foreign Policy
Analyst in Foreign Assistance and Foreign Policy
Acknowledgments
This report was originally coauthored by retired CRS Specialist in Foreign Policy Curt Tarnoff.
Disclaimer
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in its entirety without permission from CRS. However, as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to copy or otherwise use copyrighted material.
Congressional Research Service
R40213 · VERSION 31 · UPDATED
34 |
GDP |
Gross Domestic Product |
GNI |
Gross National Income |
HHS |
Department of Health and Human Services |
HIPC |
Heavily Indebted Poor Country |
IBRD |
World Bank, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development |
IDA |
World Bank, International Development Association |
IDA |
International Disaster Assistance |
IMET |
International Military Education and Training |
IMF |
International Monetary Fund |
INCLE |
International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement |
INL |
Department of State, Office of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement |
IO&P |
International Organizations and Programs |
MCC |
Millennium Challenge Corporation |
MDBs |
Multilateral Development Banks |
MDRI |
Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative |
MRA |
Migration and Refugees Assistance |
NADR |
Non-Proliferation, Anti-Terrorism, Demining and Related Programs |
NED |
National Endowment for Democracy |
NGO |
Nongovernmental Organization |
OCO |
Overseas Contingency Operations |
ODA |
Official Development Assistance |
OECD |
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development |
OFDA |
Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance |
OGAC |
Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator |
OHDACA |
DOD's Overseas Humanitarian, Disaster and Civic Assistance account |
OMB |
Office of Management and Budget |
OPIC |
Overseas Private Investment Corporation |
OTI |
Office of Transition Initiatives |
PEPFAR |
President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief |
PKO |
Peacekeeping Operations |
P.L.480 |
Food for Peace Act |
PVO |
Private Voluntary Organization |
SEED |
Support for East European Democracy Act of 1989 |
TDA |
U.S. Trade and Development Agency |
UNDP |
United Nations Development Program |
UNICEF |
United Nations Children's Fund |
USAID |
U.S. Agency for International Development |
Author Contact Information
Acknowledgments
This report was originally coauthored by retired CRS Specialist in Foreign Policy Curt Tarnoff.
1. |
Other tools of U.S. foreign policy are the U.S. defense establishment, the diplomatic corps, public diplomacy, and trade policy. American defense capabilities, even if not employed, stand as a potential stick that can be wielded to obtain specific objectives. The State Department diplomatic corps are the eyes, ears, and often the negotiating voice of the U.S. government abroad. Public diplomacy programs, such as the Fulbright program and Voice of America, project an image of the United States that may influence foreign views. U.S. trade policy—through free trade agreements and Export-Import Bank financing, for example—may directly affect the economies of other nations. Foreign aid is a particularly flexible tool—it can act as both carrot and stick, and is a means of influencing events, solving specific problems, and projecting U.S. values. |
2. |
For more information on the Marshall Plan, see CRS Report R45079, The Marshall Plan: Design, Accomplishments, and Significance. |
3. |
Congress currently appropriates most foreign affairs funding through the annual SFOPS appropriations bill. Prior to FY2008, Congress provided funding for the Department of State, international broadcasting, and related programs within the Commerce, Justice, State, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies appropriations and separately appropriated funding for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and foreign aid within the Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs appropriations. For more information, see CRS Report R44637, Department of State and Foreign Operations Appropriations: History of Legislation and Funding in Brief, by Emily M. Morgenstern. |
4. |
The President's budget and the congressional budget resolution classify federal budgetary activities into functional and subfunctional categories that represent the major purposes of the federal government. |
5. |
Greenbook data, now available as part of USAID Explorer (https://explorer.usaid.gov), provides aid obligation data by broad accounts from 1946 to 2013 and program sector breakdowns from 2001 to 2013. |
6. |
|
7. |
For more information on global health assistance, see CRS Report R43115, U.S. Global Health Appropriations: FY2001-FY2019, by Tiaji Salaam-Blyther. |
8. |
For more information on international food aid programs, see CRS Report R45422, U.S. International Food Assistance: An Overview, by Alyssa R. Casey. |
9. |
For more on U.S. payments to the United Nations, see CRS Report R45206, U.S. Funding to the United Nations System: Overview and Selected Policy Issues, by Luisa Blanchfield. |
10. |
For more information on the MDBs, see CRS Report R41170, Multilateral Development Banks: Overview and Issues for Congress, by Rebecca M. Nelson. |
11. |
Until FY1998, food provided commercially under long-term, low-interest loan terms (Title I of the Food for Peace Act [sometimes referred to as P.L. 480]) was also included in the foreign assistance account. Because of its export focus, it is no longer considered foreign aid. For more information on food aid programs, see CRS Report R45422, U.S. International Food Assistance: An Overview, by Alyssa R. Casey. |
12. |
USAID estimates that over 90% of ESF funds are implemented by USAID for development purposes. |
13. |
For further information on nonproliferation efforts, see CRS Report R43143, The Evolution of Cooperative Threat Reduction: Issues for Congress, by Mary Beth D. Nikitin and Amy F. Woolf. |
14. |
For more information on counternarcotics efforts, see CRS Report RL34543, International Drug Control Policy: Background and U.S. Responses, by Liana W. Rosen. |
15. |
The State Department determines the distribution of funds from these accounts. |
16. |
See USAID Explorer. |
17. |
Total includes employees from the USAID Office of Inspector General, but does not include institutional support contractors. |
18. |
USAID Agency Financial Report, FY2018. |
19. |
USAID Explorer. |
20. |
Ibid. |
21. |
Ibid. |
22. |
Ibid. |
23. |
Ibid. For more information on MCC, see CRS Report RL32427, Millennium Challenge Corporation: Overview and Issues, by Nick M. Brown. |
24. |
Ibid. |
25. |
The Peace Corps, Agency Financial Report, Fiscal Year 2018, Washington, DC. |
26. |
For more information on these agencies, see CRS Report RS21168, The Peace Corps: Overview and Issues, by Nick M. Brown. |
27. |
USAID Explorer. For more information on TDA, see CRS In Focus IF10673, U.S. Trade and Development Agency (TDA), by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar. |
28. |
For more information on the BUILD Act and DFC, see CRS Report R45461, BUILD Act: Frequently Asked Questions About the New U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar and Marian L. Lawson, and CRS In Focus IF11436, U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar and Nick M. Brown. |
29. |
For more information, see CRS Report 98-567, The Overseas Private Investment Corporation: Background and Legislative Issues, by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar, and CRS Report R45461, BUILD Act: Frequently Asked Questions About the New U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar and Marian L. Lawson. |
30. |
USAID Explorer. |
31. |
U.S. Overseas Loans and Grants: Obligations and Loan Authorizations, July 1, 1945-September 30, 2018 (Greenbook), CONG-R-0105. For nearly three decades, Section 620q of the Foreign Assistance Act (the Brooke amendment) has prohibited new assistance to the government of any country that falls more than one year past due in servicing its debt obligations to the United States, though the President may waive application of this prohibition if he determines it is in the national interest. |
32. |
The assistance provided to guarantee the loan varies depending on the risk. For example the Administration requested $275 million in ESF-OCO funds in FY2016 to support a $1 billion loan guarantee for Ukraine. |
33. |
Israel has not drawn on any loan guarantees since FY2004. |
34. |
For more information on these programs, see CRS Report RS21482, The Paris Club and International Debt Relief, by Martin A. Weiss. |
35. |
For more on the use of public-private partnerships in foreign assistance, see CRS Report R41880, Foreign Assistance: Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs), by Marian L. Lawson. |
36. |
Generally, USAID and other agencies funnel development assistance, in various forms, to a country's private sector, nongovernmental organizations, local communities, individual entrepreneurs, and other entities. Assistance is provided directly to the government of a country where the intention is to bring about policy reforms, improve governance, or work with a sector in which the government is the predominant element, such as in health care where the Ministry of Health would play a determinative role. Often, in cases where a government is believed to be taking action contrary to U.S. interests, Congress has specified that assistance to that government be prohibited or limited, while not affecting overall assistance to the country. |
37. |
For more information on foreign affairs OCO, see CRS In Focus IF10143, Foreign Affairs Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Funding: Background and Current Status, by Emily M. Morgenstern. For broader OCO trends, including those related to DOD, see CRS Report R44519, Overseas Contingency Operations Funding: Background and Status, by Brendan W. McGarry and Emily M. Morgenstern. |
38. |
The "Buy America" provision of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (P.L. 87-195, §604), originally required that aid procurement be made within the United States unless a detailed determination of the need to procure elsewhere was made by the President. In FY1993, Congress amended this section to allow for procurement in the United States, the recipient country, or any developing country, but in developed countries only if necessary. |
39. |
Overseas Development Institute, The Developmental Effectiveness of Untied Aid, available at http://oecd.org/dac/evaluation/dcdndep/41537529.pdf. |
40. |
Ibid. |
41. |
Data available at http://www.oecd.org/dac/financing-sustainable-development/development-finance-data/statisticsonresourceflowstodevelopingcountries.htm, Table 23. |
42. |
USAID Explorer. Entities include government agencies, nongovernmental and faith-based organizations, enterprises, and universities. |
43. |
The Cargo Preference Act, P.L. 83-644, August 26, 1954. |
44. |
For more information on food aid programs and authorities, see CRS Report R45422, U.S. International Food Assistance: An Overview, by Alyssa R. Casey. |
45. |
For the research, development and procurement of advanced weapons systems, not less than $815.3 million of aid to Israel in FY2015 could be used for offshore procurement (about 14% of total Foreign Military Finance for that year). |
46. |
|
47. |
The OECD Glossary of Statistical Terms defines ODA as "flows of official financing administered with the promotion of economic development and welfare of developing countries as the main objective, and which are concessional in character with a grant element of at least 25%. By convention, ODA flows comprise contributions of donor government agencies, at all levels, to developing countries and to multilateral institutions." ODA does not include military assistance or aid to developed countries, such as Israel and Russia. |
48. |
OECD data for 2018 is available at http://www.oecd.org/dac/financing-sustainable-development/development-finance-data/statisticsonresourceflowstodevelopingcountries.htm. |
49. |
Gross National Income (GNI) comprises GDP together with income received from other countries (notably interest and dividends), less similar payments made to other countries. |
50. |
From "Other official providers not reporting to the OECD" report on the OECD website at https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/18b00a44-en/index.html?itemId=/content/component/5e331623-en&_csp_=b14d4f60505d057b456dd1730d8fcea3&itemIGO=oecd&itemContentType=chapter#section-d1e19813. See also "China's Massive Belt and Road Initiative" by Andrew Chatzky and James McBride, Council on Foreign Relations, at https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/chinas-massive-belt-and-road-initiative. |
51. |
National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Ministry of Commerce of the People's Republic of China (PRC), "Vision and Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road," First Edition, March 2015, http://en.ndrc.gov.cn/newsrelease/201503/t20150330_669367.html. |
52. |
Separate permanent authorizations exist for other specific foreign aid programs such as the Peace Corps, the Millennium Challenge Corporation, the Inter-American Foundation, and the African Development Foundation. |
53. |
A few foreign aid programs that are authorized in other legislation have received more regular legislative review. Authorizing legislation for voluntary contributions to international organizations and refugee programs, for example, are usually contained in omnibus Foreign Relations Authorization measures that also address State Department and public diplomacy issues. Food aid and amendments to the Food for Peace Act (P.L.480) are usually considered in the omnibus "farm bill" that Congress reauthorizes every five years. The most recent farm bill was signed into law as P.L. 115-334 on December 20, 2018. |