Development assistance plays a critical role in the fight against extreme poverty and disease.
In 2000 world leaders signed on to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), eight targets to reduce global poverty and disease by 2015. Meeting these ambitious goals could transform the lives of millions of the world's poorest people, but would require major investments which were out of reach for many developing countries. By signing on to goal eight and committing to build a global partnership for development, the world's wealthy countries acknowledged development assistance as needed to bolster the investments made by poor countries themselves to reach the goals.
Wealthy countries have made ambitious commitments to increase development assistance in the past few years. While some countries have substantially increased funding, many commitments have yet to be fulfilled. Following through on these commitments has become even more important as poor countries struggle to cope with the effects of the global financial crisis and the soaring cost of food.
Since the Millennium Development Goals were signed, new investments in the fight against poverty have produced real results and improved the lives of millions of people. The numbers speak for themselves: an estimated 3.2 million Africans are currently receiving life-saving HIV/AIDS treatment (up from 50.000 in 2002) and 88 million bed nets to protect families from malaria have been delivered by the Global Fund alone. Progress has also been made in getting children into school. 34 million African children went to school for the first time between 1999 and 2006, thanks in part to savings from debt relief and development assistance for education.
These results are evidence that development assistance can have a transformative impact in the world's poorest countries, especially when it is combined with committed and transparent leadership and policies aimed at economic growth.
Learn more, read the full Development Assistance Issue Brief...
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President Obama requests a $2.9 billion increase in global poverty-focused programs.
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At the end of November 2008, world leaders met in Doha, Qatar for a UN-hosted International Conference on Financing for Development.
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We can upgrade U.S. foreign aid through the bipartisan Foreign Assistance Revitalization and Accountability Act (S. 1524), which gives USAID the tools and people it needs to better fight hunger and poverty around the world. But this bill critically needs more support in order to make it through the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. MORE
September - October, 2008
In September 2008, before a High Level Event on the Millennium Development Goals, more than 50,000 European ONE members mobilized to urge world leaders to fill the worldwide US$1 billion funding gap to combat the food crisis.
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July - November, 2008
With €1 billion of funding to struggling farmers in developing countries on the line, European ONE members helped apply public pressure at the critical moment to help secure this new money.
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March - May, 2006
More than 100,000 U.S. ONE members took action in just 6 days to urge senators to restore critical anti-poverty funding to the Fiscal Year 2007 International Affairs Budget, leading to a bipartisan majority of the US Senate asking Appropriations' leadership to protect development assistance.
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ONE today announced it would work closely with The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to launch the Living Proof Project: Investments in Global Health are Working, a multi-year awareness campaign by the Gates Foundation to highlight the extraordinary success of the United States and other G8 government's efforts to improve health around the world. MORE
Anti-poverty group ONE welcomed two announcements today that will bolster smart efforts taking aim at preventable diseases in poor countries: an extra $1 billion in support of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) and a new airline ticket program allowing airline customers to voluntarily contribute $2 each time they fly to help fight HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis. MORE
World leaders meeting at the Group of 20 (G20) Summit in Pittsburgh are being urged by the advocacy group ONE to put Africa at the heart of global recovery efforts by agreeing to hold a future summit on the continent in 2010. MORE
The Republic of Senegal signed a five-year, $540 million compact with the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC). The compact is the eleventh-and third largest-to be signed between a sub-Saharan African country and the MCC, which provides assistance to well-governed, low-income countries who develop credible programs for reducing poverty and promoting economic growth MORE
Thanks to scaled up support for simple, relatively inexpensive solutions like anti-malaria mosquito nets, measles vaccinations and vitamin supplements, the number of children dying before their fifth birthdays each year has been cut to the lowest level ever on record, 8.8 million, according to a report released today by Unicef. MORE
The International Monetary Fund has delivered a significantly improved financing package for the least developed countries, ONE said today. The package includes zero interest rate loans through 2011. It also provides lending capacity of $17 billion through 2014. MORE
and helped save an estimated 2.5 million lives since 2002.
on development assistance to sub-Saharan Africa, halfway to the target date of 2010.
went to school for the first time between 1999 and 2006, thanks in part to debt relief and assistance for education.