Analysis: Obama's 2014 foreign aid budget request

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry. Photo by: U.S. State Department

The Obama administration released its fiscal 2014 budget on Wednesday, totaling $52 billion in foreign assistance and support funding, a $2.4 billion decrease from fiscal 2012. In the document, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry noted foreign assistance is a strategic imperative for America — not charity or a favor.

“It lifts others up, and then reinforces their willingness to link arms with us in common endeavors,” Kerry writes at the beginning of the 176-page executive summary. “When we help other nations crack down on corruption, it makes it easier for our companies to do business, as well as theirs… This budget enables us to respond to the dynamic political, economic and social shifts we see around the world.”

As expected, the budget, which will face the daunting task of passing as is through the House of Representatives, where Republicans hold the majority, contains some proposed overhauls to the way the United States administers foreign humanitarian aid. The delivery of food aid, for instance, would look different, channeled more effectively and swiftly into three programs, including a planned $75 million emergency food assistance fund, all managed by the U.S. Agency for International Development. The proposed transition, is being backed by large international humanitarian groups like CARE and Oxfam International.

Funding for USAID would rise slightly next year under the proposal, to $1.57 billion, from $1.52 billion in 2012 and $1.53 billion in the sequestered 2013 budget, while military operations, in form of overseas contingency operations, would be slashed by $184 million, down to $71 million.

Education and cultural exchange programs, which include American research centers overseas and a literacy training center in Pakistan, also would take a loss of $15 million, totaling $309 million. Other educational independent centers and funds, like the National Endowment for Democracy, which provides funds to nongovernmental organizations, also would experience significant cuts, as would migration and refugee assistance.

The budget is dense and only subtly reveals the areas that would feel the proposed fiscal decrease. Some highlights, based on an initial Devex analysis, include.

Global health

International organizations, financial institutions and foundations

Climate and disasters

Economic assistance

Watch out for updated coverage including stories on food aid reform and industry reactions.

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