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                                                                                       Updated December  2, 2019

U.S. Agency for International Development: An Overview


The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
is the lead international humanitarian and development arm
of the United States government. Its programs support U.S.
political and strategic aims by providing assistance to
strategically important countries and countries in conflict;
leading global efforts to alleviate poverty, disease, and
humanitarian need; and assisting U.S. commercial interests
by furthering developing countries' economic growth and
building these countries' capacity to participate in world
trade.

USAID   is responsible for the implementation of more than
$20 billion in combined annual appropriations, representing
more than one-third of the funds provided in the State,
Foreign Operations (SFOPS) appropriation and
international food aid provided in the Agriculture
appropriation. USAID's annual appropriations come from
14 budget accounts-most  solely owned and some
programmed  collaboratively with the Department of
State-making  any calculation of its current budget
imprecise. (For more on SFOPS, see CRS Report R45763,
Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related
Programs: FY2020  Budget and Appropriations.)

  On behalf of the American people, we promote and
  demonstrate democratic values abroad, and advance a
  free, peaceful, and prosperous world. In support of
  America's foreign policy, the U.S. Agency for International
  Development leads the U.S. Government's international
  development and disaster assistance through partnerships
  and investments that save lives, reduce poverty, strengthen
  democratic governance, and help people emerge from
  humanitarian crises and progress beyond assistance.
  -  USAID  Mission Statement (2019)

USAID   maintains more than 60 country and regional
missions that design and manage a range of projects, most
intended to meet specific development objectives as
outlined in a Country Development Cooperation Strategy.
Most projects are implemented, through a grant,
cooperative agreement, or contract, by one of thousands of
foreign and U.S. development partners-such as nonprofit
private voluntary organizations and other nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs), for-profit contractors, universities,
international organizations, and foreign governments.
In FY2018, the most recent year for which detailed data are
available, USAID provided assistance to more than 120
countries. Foreign aid allocations reflect both recipient
needs and U.S. foreign policy priorities. The top 10
recipients of US AID-implemented funds in FY2018 were,
in order of funding, Jordan, Afghanistan, Nigeria, Ethiopia,
South Sudan, Syria, Yemen, Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Iraq, and Kenya. Reflecting USAID's poverty


reduction mandate, 72 of the 78 World Bank-determined
low- and lower-middle-income countries received
assistance in FY2018, with about 50% of USAID funds
attributable to specific countries and regions in sub-Saharan
Africa (Figure 1).

Figure I. USAID-Implemented Program Funding, by
Region  and Sector: FY20 18


N~N


Source: Foreign Aid Explorer and CRS calculations.

Since the early 1990s, health has consistently been the
largest USAID sector, bolstered since 2004 by billions of
dollars in transfers from the Department of State's
President's Emergency Program for AIDS Relief
(PEPFAR).  Humanitarian assistance has also increased in
recent years, particularly in response to both the emergence
of new natural and human-induced humanitarian crises, and
ongoing protracted crises. (For more information on U.S.
responses to humanitarian crises, see CRS In Focus
IF10568, Overview of the Global Humanitarian and
Displacement Crisis.)

USAID   Under   the TrumpA
USAID   Administrator Mark Green was sworn in on August
7, 2017. Under his leadership, and in response to
Administration directives aimed at making federal agencies
more efficient, effective, and accountable, USAID has
pursued a series of internal reforms, branded as USAID
Transformation. Reforms are focused in three target
areas-process and programs, organizational structure, and
workforce management-and   many  build on past efforts,
including those of the Obama and George W. Bush


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