Thursday, July 25, 2013

Who gets the most US Foreign Aid?



by Daniel Pipes


Israel, of course. Except it does not, not even remotely during the past decade. Totting up the most recent figures, 2002-2011 from the U.S. government's own statistics and using constant 2011 U.S. dollars, one finds that the numbers for all economic and military aid look like this:
  • Afghanistan: $60,017,650,000
  • Iraq: $64,373,630,000
  • Israel: $30,645,470,000
Source: U.S. Overseas Loans and Grants (known as the Greenbook).

Further, these numbers substantially understate U.S. support for the economies and militaries of Afghanistan and Iraq, including neither the hundreds of billions of dollars spent on the U.S. war fighting effort in those countries, which purchased substantial amounts in the local market, employed many locals, and led to unspeakably vast amounts of graft; nor do the above numbers include the military equipment declared excess and donated to their armed forces.
Comments:

(1) I have long opposed economic and military aid to Israel's mature economy that can stand on its own two feet. Its 2011 gross domestic product was $243 billion, meaning that U.S. aid came to a paltry 1 percent -- not worth the trouble in terms of political resentment and financial distortion.

(2) In contrast, to take the opposite extreme, Afghanistan's 2011 gross domestic product was $19 billion, meaning that American aid alone made up two-thirds of the entire country's income that year, a sure recipe for political and financial havoc. I even more strenuously oppose such handouts -- what used to be called development aid -- which long before 2002 was known not to work as intended. More than ever, this latest experience vividly shows how it amounts to thrown-out money.

Daniel Pipes (DanielPipes.org) is president of the Middle East Forum.
 
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=5109

Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

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