Donors
in sentence
690 examples of Donors in a sentence
Highly targeted Western aid and advice can help, but
donors
must take more care not to stand in the way of the beneficiaries in assisting them.
That thought may lead us to disdain the kind of philanthropic graffiti that leads to donors’ names being prominently displayed on concert halls, art museums, and college buildings.
Most
donors
see giving as personally rewarding.
Past efforts have been victims of their own success: as the burst of worldwide agricultural research and development in the 1970’s and 1980’s led to global food abundance in the 1990’s and 2000’s, foreign-aid
donors
turned to other priorities, and their per-capita support for African agriculture fell to a historical low in 2006 of around one dollar per year.
Governments, donors, and other investors can still make bad choices, but there are unprecedented opportunities for high-payoff growth.
Relative to gross national income, the UK is among the world’s most generous aid donors, a stature that gives Britain a larger voice in shaping the international development agenda.
Yet the authorities and aid
donors
alike stubbornly fail to recognize the obvious, and instead continue to pursue costly and ultimately ineffective interventions.
After nine years of quick-fix and temporary solutions, Pakistan and its
donors
need to recognize that its energy crisis can be resolved only through institutional reform.
The World Bank should develop the expertise to help
donors
and recipient governments make these programs work.
Together with governments, educators, donors, and other partners, we can help close the gap and achieve education for all.
Yet
donors
and governments remain reluctant to provide the needed funding.
What’s more, he helped them raise record-breaking financial commitments from donors: $11.7 billion for the Global Fund, and $3 billion for Roll Back Malaria.
The complete engagement of international and regional actors and
donors
will remain a central component of progress for the foreseeable future.
Because of the global recession, some international
donors
are threatening to cap their financial support.
Compounding the problem:
donors
have also been shifting their focus from AIDS to other diseases, because there is a sense that more lives can be saved more cheaply.
As chair of this year’s replenishment of the Global Fund, I urge all
donors
to see to it that countries such as Uganda get the support they need, so that Dr. Mugyenyi and other front-line soldiers in the fight against AIDS need not make those difficult choices.
Though UNRWA has more than 100 donors, almost a quarter of its total budget – nearly $400 million annually – previously came from the US.
Now, UNRWA’s other
donors
– the top ten of which contribute some 80% of the body’s total budget – are under pressure to bridge the funding gap.
And some
donors
are already stepping up.
Other
donors
– such as Denmark, Finland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Russia, and Switzerland – have agreed to frontload their funding as well.
This gives
donors
an easy excuse: they would have helped, if only there was the capacity to do so.
The Republican Party as a whole attracts massive financial support from opponents of decarbonization, and these
donors
aggressively fight even the smallest step toward renewable energy.
The result is higher costs for taxpayers and
donors.
Yet international
donors
have not stepped in to pick up the slack.
Foreign
donors
must insist that Pakistan reform its economy in order to escape the moral hazard implied by continued dependence on aid flows.
But Uganda’s international
donors
are not convinced; the United States has voiced strong concern, and Belgium has suspended development aid to Uganda’s health-care sector.
That means operating beyond Europe’s borders, as, from the donors’ perspective, it is much less disruptive and expensive to maintain asylum-seekers close to their present locations.
The United Nations estimates that there are now more than 37,000 international NGOs, with major
donors
relying on them more and more.
Among the questions being asked by NGOs, the UN, and national
donors
is how to prevent the recurrence of past mistakes.
More and more
donors
are also insisting that NGOs provide measurable proof that they make a difference.
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