Global humanitarian aid spending soars to record high


Global humanitarian aid spending soars to record high

24 Jun 2014: Total contributions rocketed to $22bn last year, spurred by typhoon Haiyan and conflicts in South Sudan and Syria

Global humanitarian aid spending soars to record high

Total contributions rocketed to $22bn last year, spurred by typhoon Haiyan and conflicts in South Sudan and Syria
Syria refugees
Turkey was the world's third-largest donor of humanitarian aid last year, spending £940m on the Syrian refugees within its borders. Photograph: AFP/Getty
Global spending on humanitarian relief soared to a record $22bn (£12.93bn) last year as conflicts in Central African Republic, South Sudan and Syria combined with natural disasters such as typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines, drove donors to pay out more emergency aid than ever before.
Donations from governments reached $16.4bn (£9.63bn) last year, a 24% rise from 2012 figures, says research group Development Initiatives (DI).
Private donations – from corporations, foundations, individuals and trusts, usually in response to natural disasters – grew by 35% over the same period, according to preliminary estimates.
Despite a record level of aid, Dan Coppard, director of research and analysis at DI, said: "There is no place for complacency, with over a third of needs still not being met and demands set to rise in 2014 and beyond. As more actors provide assistance, we will need to improve the transparency of both humanitarian and other potential financial resources to target populations more effectively.
"Humanitarian assistance is only one small element of the total resources reaching crisis-affected countries, yet [it] continues to play a critical and unique function in providing a principled response to crisis-affected populations."
The UK and US were the top donors of humanitarian aid last year, while Turkey spent $1.6bn (£940m) on relief projects, mainly aimed at the 735,000 Syrian refugees living in the country, making it the third-largest donor.
The Syrian conflict continued to be one of the most expensive humanitarian disasters with $3.1bn (£1.82bn) spent on shelter, food and emergency relief for refugees. After holding a Syria pledging summit, Kuwait increased its humanitarian spending more than any donor government, recording a 2,315% increase from last year.
At the other end of the spectrum, Brazil's humanitarian spending dropped by 97%, while China cut aid by 84% and Russia's donations fell by 45%.
"Despite increases in total assistance, figures show that there are stark disparities in the scale of humanitarian response, resulting in a number of crises being forgotten," Coppard said. "Just under a quarter of the total international humanitarian response went to the top five recipient countries, while other countries such as Nepal, [Burma] and Algeria continued to be de-prioritised."
Total donations are calculated by adding the humanitarian assistance expenditure of the 26 members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's development assistance committee, a group that directs aid flows from the world's largest economies, with relief spending by other countries as noted by the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in its financial tracking service report, which records all reported international humanitarian funding and private sector spending.
Sources for the figures come from a data set of 75 NGOs, annual reports for six UN agencies with humanitarian mandates – the UN children's fund, Unicef, UN Development Programme, UN High Commissioner for Refugees, UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, the World Food Programme, and the World Health Organisation – and annual reports from the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and the International Committee of the Red Cross.
The full report will be published in September.
COPY  http://www.theguardian.com

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