what aid is Needed after sudden disasters?
Emergency/ short-term aid.
What is Conditional/ tied aid
Describe Charitable aid
Describe Long-term/ development aid.
Providing local communities with education and skills for sustainable development
Describe Multilateral aid.
Advantages of aid for donor countries
Advantages of aid for recipient countries
Additional income for government
disadvantages of aid for donor countries
Disadvantages of aid for recipient countries
Encourages the growth of a larger than necessary public sector
What is short term emergency aid?
Short-term assistance to reduce immediate threats to life: food, clothes, medical supplies and shelter, help refugees fleeing from natural or human disasters (e.g. Nov 2007 Bangladesh storm) (NGOs direct to those in need)
(Sudan 2008
Sichuan, China 2008 earthquake disaster zones)
Describe Cyclone Nargis Myanmar.
Storm surge killed 140,000 people destroyed 450,000 homes and damaged 350,000 others (77-85% of housing destroyed), 2.4m severely affected. Humanitarian assistance: food, shelter, clean water and medical supplies. Myanmar government (political reasons) refused aid – 10 helicopters from UN World Food Programme and US warships refused permission to land and unload). Half of those severely affected did not receive humanitarian aid. Rebuild damaged infrastructure – roads, bridges, schools and hospitals and restore livelihoods. Repair of 2000km2 damaged rice fields by salinization.
Describe Long term development aid
Grants and loans, debt cancellation and technical assistance (large-scale construction projects to improve infrastructure – energy supply/ transport). Effects trickle down and improve the lives of everyone.
Tied aid benefits the donor more than the recipient in economic terms, aid on large capital intensive projects may worsen the conditions of the poorest people, the strengthening of political ties of bilateral aid may increase dependency and hinder democracy, may delay the introduction of reforms
àSmaller-scale projects (fund local schemes – well construction, primary education, health care and the provision of micro-finance)
Long term development aid
(Uganda and Zambia) City Community Challenge
– reduce urban poverty. HIV prevalence is around 25%, poor housing, crime, poverty, no household sanitation, few clinics, scarce formal employment (informal sector & casual labour) - $2m from UK’s Department for International Development. Small grants and loans for community-managed improvements in urban slums = greater commitment and active involvement (retailing, fish-farming, charcoal making, broom making, water supply, carpentry). Aim to build low-cost housing and provide practical skills – bricklaying and plastering. 14-classroom primary school for homeless street children.
Describe the Practical Action shelter project – sustainable development
Provide education and skills to communities in order to build better quality housing using their own labour, local resources and traditional techniques (prevent shanty town developments)
Describe OEDC – Organisation for Economic Development and Cooperation
Africa is the biggest receiver of aid (2003) with Mozambique receiving the ODA in terms of their GDP (60%). Today: Israel
Norway provides the most aid (in terms of their GDP) – 0.87%
Describe the wold bank.
Financing construction and development of national infrastructure (dams and roads)
Supported with funding and technical assistance to increase output, productivity and sustainable economic growth
Targets smaller geographical areas and smaller projects – raise incomes of peasant farmers; increasing food production, improving education, water supply and health care
Describe NGO’s
Directing aid towards sustainable development – target the poorest communities using appropriate technology and involving local people in decision making (write off Third World debt and fairly share the benefits
Describe an example of NGO’s.
E.g. UK to Bangladesh (with multilateral aid of the World Bank, Japan and the Asian Development Bank):
Aim: stable, prosperous and moderate Muslim democracy
Describe UN millennium goals (anti-poverty).
millennium goals (anti-poverty). $1bn debt cancelled for the 18 most indebted countries (debt relief)
Describe the East Africa Crisis Appeal (EMERGENCY)
East Africa Crisis Appeal (EMERGENCY)
Aid,
Multiple NGOs involved: orchestrated campaigns to reduce corruption
Describe the East Africa Crisis Appeal (EMERGENCY)
Describe the Japan earthquake (emergancy)
Japan earthquake (EMERGENCY)
2011 – magnitude 9 earthquake created a tsunami
16,000 dead, $3bn damage
Cooling system failure at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant à nuclear meltdown à radioactive material into seawater
Describe aid to the Japan earthquake.
US provided cooling equipment and a fire truck to deal with high levels of radioactivity – monitor radioactivity. France – robots to help with monitoring
Describe the impact of the Japan earthquake.