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Humanitarian trends April 2010. What does the programme do? Map financial flows Provide access to no-spin data and information Encourage debate Provide.

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Presentation on theme: "Humanitarian trends April 2010. What does the programme do? Map financial flows Provide access to no-spin data and information Encourage debate Provide."— Presentation transcript:

1 Humanitarian trends April 2010

2 What does the programme do? Map financial flows Provide access to no-spin data and information Encourage debate Provide global perspective beyond crisis

3 Donors

4 Is humanitarian aid from DAC donors going up or down? Source: OECD DAC

5 How much ODA (ex debt relief) is ‘humanitarian’? Source: OECD DAC

6 The United States remains the biggest humanitarian donor Source: OECD DAC

7 DAC donor humanitarian aid in 2008 US$11.2bn Total official humanitarian aid 9.3% Share of ODA spent on humanitarian aid US$9.5 Spent by citizens on humanitarian aid 0.05% Average share of gross national income spent on humanitarian aid 28.7% Change in humanitarian aid expenditure since 2007 Source: OECD DAC From Japan, US$2 to Luxembourg, US$107 From Portugal,US$25m, to US, US$4.3bn From Japan and Portugal, 0.01%, to Luxembourg, 0.13% From Japan, 3.5%, to Ireland, 17.8% New Zealand’s fell by 20%, Japan’s increased by 110%

8 DAC and Non-DAC contributions to the FTS Source: UN OCHA FTS Saudi Arabia (Kingdom of)US$45 m KuwaitUS$43 m United Arab EmiratesUS$34 m Russian FederationUS$32 m IndiaUS$14 m Korea, Republic ofUS$13 m QatarUS$13 m TurkeyUS$4 m Czech RepublicUS$4 m Hong KongUS$4 m

9 Recipients:

10 CAP appeal funding requirements 2003-2010 Source: UN OCHA FTS

11 Source: OECD DAC

12 Top 10 recipients of non-DAC donor humanitarian assistance in 2009 Source: UN OCHA FTS

13 Common humanitarian funds Source: UN OCHA FTS

14 Recipients of CERF money Total 2008: US$429mTotal 2009: US$397m Source: UN CERF

15 Regional Changes...

16 Agriculture & Food

17 The Issue of Data Categories SectorDACFTS Food  Basic nutrition  Social/welfare services  Agro-industries  Rural development  Food aid/Food security programmes  Emergency Food Aid Food distribution Food-for-Work Monitoring of food security / livelihoods / nutrition Support for logistics of bulk food (e.g. transport, port facilities) Buffer stocks School feeding Agriculture  Agricultural policy and administrative management  Agricultural land resources  Agrarian reform  Agricultural development  Food crop production  Industrial crops/export crops  Livestock  Agricultural alternative development  Livestock/veterinary services  Agricultural inputs  Agricultural extension  Agricultural education/training  Agricultural research  Agricultural services  Plant and post-harvest protection and pest control  Agricultural financial services  Agricultural co-operatives  Agricultural water resources Livestock re-stocking Seed / seedling / tuber propagation or diversification Agricultural extension & training Veterinary services Pest control Environmental management Aquaculture4 Coordination / information / early warning Agricultural water systems (irrigation, wells) Seeds & tools distribution (more broadly, provision of agricultural inputs, incl. fertiliser)

18 The global trend...

19 Countries receiving long-term humanitarian assistance..

20 Country aid profiles vary...

21 Sudan CAP Funding 2000 – 2008: Agriculture: 42% Food: 81%

22 Somalia... CAP Funding 2000 – 2008: Agriculture: 39% Food: 96%

23 49.4% 41.3% 46.6% 44.9% 29.1% Regional Food Aid

24 5.3% Regional Agriculture

25 Context & Concentrations

26 Fragile States – Concentration of ODA in 2008

27 UN consolidated appeals 2000-2010 Source: UN OCHA FTS

28 We work to provide access to reliable, transparent and understandable information so that we can all work to ensure better outcomes for people affected by humanitarian crises. Global Humanitarian Assistance is a Development Initiatives programme, funded by the governments of Canada, Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom Clarity Counts MAPPING FINANCIAL FLOWS We work in detail to highlight relationships between and within financial flows, mapping out who spends what, and where, enabling donors, NGOs, governments and local communities to better respond to people in humanitarian need. PROVIDING ACCESS TO NO-SPIN DATA & INFO We provide no-spin analysis on financial flows, emphasising simplicity and clarity at all times, and work hard to make this complex world accessible. We help researchers, students and journalists to use and apply raw data, contributing to evidence-based policy making. ENCOURAGING DEBATE We build a broad network for transparency in humanitarian aid flows. We work hard to agree numbers and definitions so we can discuss the issues – not argue about the figures themselves. PROVIDING PERSPECTIVE BEYOND CRISIS Our work on humanitarian assistance is in the wider context of a global commitment to poverty reduction and interconnects with global, regional and national concerns such as climate change, financial crises, conflict and chronic poverty. Name: Jan Kellett, Programme Leader Email: jan@devinit.orgjan@devinit.org Tel: +44 (0)1749 671343 Web: globalhumanitarianassistance.org Global Humanitarian Assistance, Development Initiatives, Keward Court, Jocelyn Drive, Wells, Somerset, BA5 1DB, UK Email: gha@devinit.orggha@devinit.org


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