Wow, it's a shock that the USA is behind Germany in aid spending in the Americas. My thought on that, is that for the USA, the local "backyard" is a source for cheap labor and resources. US Corporations have a vested interest in keeping the South underdeveloped, because it helps to keep American corporations globally competitive. Gotta put the sweatshops somewhere, right?
It's not by terribly
much, for what it's worth. Also, ho,
found some humanitarian aid numbers! And look lower in the post for much better ones, as I'm not going to take the effort to rearrange this post to put it up here where they probably should be.
... they're much smaller numbers than the developmental aid numbers, and the US is... actually performing at about the same level in a relative sense, near as I can tell skimming over things (point against the report at the top: It's much more floweryand annoying to find raw numbers than in those DA ones). Government spending on humanitarian aid in '14, ferex, was ~6 billion from the US, ~2.3 bn from the UK, ~6.7 if you bundle the top four EU sources (which would include the UK's 2.3) together.
Though... actually, now that I skim a bit further down, it actually looks like they're using the DA numbers I linked to before? Maybe developmental aid and humanitarian aid
are the same insofar as data gathering is concerned? Ah, in conjunction with
this, apparently, which
does seem to be something specifically focused on humanitarian numbers, though how much you trust a UN source and the methodology being used is perhaps up to the reader, aheh. It's a pretty neat site on the face of it, though. If the european commission and the individual european countries are different things, the EU on the net is indeed kinda' kicking our ass, heh.
@rol: Acronym-y wise, most of it you can just sorta' ignore unless you're very interested in the nitty gritty of where the numbers are exactly coming from, so far as I can tell. Just eyeball the donor and recipient bits when you get to actual dollar amounts to get a general feel of things, heh.