U.S a stingiest nation--NOT

In the thread Re: Generic Drugs and the HIV/AIDS issue. I had posted that U.S was considered the stingiest nation (I had read it in some paper). Well I stand corrected.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/04/opinion/04adelman.html?oref=login
ALTHOUGH the Bush administration has now pledged $350 million for the Asian tsunami catastrophe, claims that America is “stingy” are still in the air. The criticism stems from the much-touted fact that our government’s foreign aid ranks last among developed countries as a percentage of gross national income.

This rankles, as Americans tend to think of themselves as a generous people. How can we, the richest nation in the world, not be more caring? The answer is simple: we actually are.

For one thing, our government gives the highest absolute amount in foreign aid - more than $16 billion in 2003. And this does not include the cost of our global military presence, which helps provide the stability needed for economic growth, or the billions spent on developing medicines that save millions of lives in poorer nations.

Most important, however, Americans generally help people abroad the same way they help people at home: through private charities, religious organizations, foundations, corporations, universities and money sent to relatives. In 2000, all this came to more than $35 billion, more than three times what the government gave. And this does did not include giving by local churches or by overseas affiliates of American corporations.

The fact is, foreign aid is being privatized. A study by the Foundation Center found that international giving by foundations grew by 79 percent 1998 from 2002, while overall giving grew by only 42 percent. Private giving is usually faster, nimbler and more directly accountable than government aid. Overhead costs are lower, and it can better avoid interference by corrupt officials. It’s no surprise that some of the first groups on the scene in Asia were private; on the day of the earthquake, CARE bought food for more than 8,000 Sri Lankans along with purification supplies and sleeping mats for 500 families.

The Europeans assist the needy abroad as they do the needy at home, primarily through government programs. This makes them appear generous: Norway ranks first in allocating 0.92 percent of its gross national income to foreign aid. But Norway’s $2 billion of yearly aid is less than what American companies alone give.

So rather than talking about our stinginess, the Europeans and the United Nations should look to increase the role of private donors. After all, the victims of a tsunami do not care whether the food, medicine and clean water come from a government or an independent charity.

Carol Adelman, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, is a former assistant administrator of the United States Agency for International Development

Re: U.S a stingiest nation–NOT

Tsunami aid: Who’s giving what
Donations of money and assistance have been pouring in to international aid agencies from governments and individuals in the wake of the tsunami disaster in Asia.
Here is a breakdown of more than $2bn in aid pledged so far:


Japan
$500m (£264m) in government donations, 120 civilian emergency workers sent to tsunami-hit countries.

USA
$350m in government donations, plus military assistance involving 12,600 personnel, 21 ships, 14 cargo planes and 48 helicopters. Private donations are also pouring in, with $120m donated to the US branches of the Red Cross, Oxfam and Save the Children, and to Catholic Relief Services.

World Bank
$250m diverted from existing programmes to cover emergency needs while longer-term reconstruction needs are assessed.

Norway
$182m in government donations, plus $30m raised in private donations.

Asian Development Bank
$175m has been diverted from existing programmes in Indonesia, Sri Lanka and the Maldives. The bank says up to $150m more could be made available in new loans.

FROM THE WORLD’S POOREST
Russian town of Beslan - scene of a bloody school siege last year - pledged 1m roubles ($36,000) from the fund set up after the mass hostage-taking
Mozambique - one of the world’s poorest nations - has donated $100,000
Nepal and East Timor have also pledged donations
Britain
$96m in government donations, plus $146m in private donations which the government has pledged to match. Two RAF planes, a C-17 and a Tristar, are helping to deliver aid to the region. Chancellor Gordon Brown is pushing a proposal for the debts of the affected nations to be frozen.

Italy
$95m in government aid. Six to eight police forensics specialists have been sent to Thailand to help to identify bodies. Public donations totalling $20m had been collected by New Year’s Day.

Sweden
$80m in government donations, plus $60m in private donations including money raised during two telethons.

Denmark
$75m in government aid. Copenhagen has sent a field hospital, transport vehicles and a ship to the UN aid effort, Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen has said.

Spain
$68m in government donations, and a medical team has been sent to Sri Lanka.

France
$66m in government donations, plus an estimated $49m raised in private donations. A medical team has been sent to Sri Lanka.

Canada
$66m in government donations, plus at least $29m raised in private donations with a government commitment to match every dollar donated by the public. Ottawa has already placed a moratorium on debt from the affected countries. It is also deploying its highly-specialised Disaster Assistance Response Team to Sri Lanka.

China
$60m in government donations, plus $1.8m donated to the Chinese Red Cross.

South Korea
$50m in government aid. The prime minister’s office said the funds would be spend for rehabilitation of the devastated areas over the next three years. Private donations have reached nearly $13m, the South Korean foreign ministry says.

Australia
$46m has been donated in government aid, and donations from the public total $58m. About 350 military staff, four military helicopters, a troop transport ship, a military health support team and a water purification plant are being sent to Indonesia, as well as a team of volunteer medical professionals.

Netherlands
$34m has been donated by the government and aid groups say a further $35m has been raised in private donations. A Dutch police identification team has been sent to Thailand.

European Union
$31m in aid, although EU External Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner has said this may be increased by tens of millions of euros.

Germany
$27m in government aid. Berlin is planning to increase this to $680m, according to a government source. Germany is also sending a mobile hospital to Aceh and a military ship with two helicopters, aid supplies, water treatment equipment and an operating theatre on board. The public have donated an estimated $130m.

Qatar
$25m in government aid. Qatar is also sending food, medical and logistical supplies to affected countries.

Countries in the region

India
The Indian military is staging its biggest relief operation ever in Sri Lanka, the Maldives and Indonesia. This involves at least 16,000 troops, 32 navy ships, 41 aircraft including at least 16 helicopters, several medical teams and a mobile hospital. The air force has so far lifted 10,000 tonnes of relief supplies.

Bangladesh
Bangladesh has dispatched 111 soldiers to Sri Lanka and the Maldives, with a further 46 expected to join them. Two planes and two helicopters will carry the troops together with aid supplies.

Pakistan
Pakistan plans to send 500 military staff in medical and engineering teams to Indonesia and Sri Lanka.

Re: U.S a stingiest nation–NOT

Turkey 1.25 million

http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/asiapcf/01/02/world.relief.contribution.reut/index.html

Versus

Sandra Bullock, (American actress) 1 Million

http://www.nypost.com/news/nationalnews/37788.htm

I hereby nominate Turkey as the Stingiest Nation. What about the Ummah Turkey!

Re: U.S a stingiest nation--NOT

turkey was never part of the ummah. didnt you hear, its gone secular.

i believe the british ppl outdone anyone else with thier genorisity. 60 million pounds and still counting (120 million dollars i think). Not even the gov cud out do it, despite trebling thier original amount.

Re: U.S a stingiest nation–NOT

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=384155

Private U.S. Aid for Tsunami Tops $200M

Re: U.S a stingiest nation–NOT

Right. But the question is related to nations. US also has the largest number of millionaires, so if we are maintaining the correlation..it is not a big deal. The govt increasing the aid to $350 mill is the right step in the right direction.

Re: U.S a stingiest nation--NOT

The United States as a nation also knows that the citizenship will step up. Since the United States is not a person, the citizens and what they give definitely count.

What I find interesting is that Americans as a whole know how poorly the rest of the world thinks about us and still step up and give what they can because they care about the people and not the politics in a time of crisis, unlike other nations and their people who compare pennies. Even though we have millions going there, still the criticism mounts.

Kind of makes you think, don't it.

Also, if you want brutal honesty ---- to those who criticize how many millions is enough or not enough, we are not obligated to give anything. This isn't a contest on who is better where. No one anywhere is entitled to one penny of mine just because I am in America, neither is my nation under obligation to hand out money just because we can.

People ought not to be counting pennies that others give but doing what they can themselves and being worried about their own backyard.

whew That being said, my prayers still go everyday to the people and families caught in this disaster and at our university we are putting together care packages and donations.