Donors
in sentence
690 examples of Donors in a sentence
It has often joined with the IMF in strong-arming countries into accepting this “advice”: unless they do, they will not only be cut off by the IMF and the World Bank, but also by other donors, and capital markets will be discouraged from providing funds.
But to do that, donors, development partners, governments, and the private sector must invest in more and better data that are sorted by age and sex.
This financing will be complemented by a $2 billion “buy down” fund, which will use the new grants from
donors
to offer financing on terms that developing countries can afford.
An international donors’ conference is called.
Development’s New DonorsMOSCOW – In 2006, when Russia’s government hosted a G-8 meeting on cooperation with emerging development donors, it planted a seed that had great growth potential.
But there is a risk that developing countries, already burdened by dealing with numerous donors, will face an even greater fragmentation of aid efforts.
New
donors
can lessen the load on the world’s poorest and increase effectiveness by working together through multilateral channels.
In Moscow this week, both newer and traditional aid donors, as well as multilateral organizations – such as the World Bank Group and the OECD – will discuss improving transparency of aid, coordination of assistance, and enhancing effectiveness by targeting results.
Russia recognizes that newer
donors
have experiences, ideas, and resources that can help all countries climb up the ladder of opportunity.
The World Bank wants to learn from these donors, catalyze deeper cooperation, and build a stronger and deeper multilateral system.
For the World Bank, the Moscow conference marks a welcome step in building a more globalized aid architecture that recognizes a variety of contributions from aid
donors
and organizations, including through private-sector development.
We urge other
donors
and international organizations to join us in contributing to the “Moscow Process” as we modernize multilateralism.
The rest of the international community, including donors, international financial institutions, and the private sector, must marshal its resources, whether financial, political, diplomatic, or technical, to help roll out forward-looking refugee policies across affected countries.
The economists recommended that the world’s
donors
and governments focus first on these investments.
The consequences of retaining it might not be as dramatic as Keynes’ prophesied, but there is a real possibility that the Bank will ossify into an institution whose increasingly impoverished G-7
donors
dispense progressively smaller sums of money in the same questionable ways to a shrinking number of supplicants.
Some countries, like the United Kingdom, Norway, Sweden, South Korea, and Australia, are increasing their foreign-aid budgets; others, even traditionally generous
donors
like Japan and the Netherlands, have reduced theirs.
An emergency summit planned for this week in Geneva is an opportunity for
donors
to stave off the worst, by providing the $1.7 billion the United Nations estimates an effective response will require.
That will require
donors
to abandon their short-sighted and wrong-headed perceptions of the DRC as a lost cause, and instead help the country build the future that its children deserve.
In their obsession with low corporate and personal taxes, and their loathing of organized labor and the federal government, rich donors, such as the brothers Charles and David Koch, or the casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, appear to be manipulating Trump, rather than the other way around.
This approach was used successfully for HIV/AIDS medications, when
donors
pooled procurement for low- and middle-income countries to create price ceilings.
My ministry has worked with the international community, especially UNICEF and the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, as well as international
donors
like the European Union, the United Kingdom, and the World Bank, to develop the strategy we call Reaching All Children with Education (RACE).
We estimate that providing a refugee child with a place in our public schools will cost roughly $1,800 per year;
donors
are being asked to contribute $363 per student in the first shift and $600 per student in the second.
So I call on
donors
to make multi-year commitments that enable us to ensure the students are able to complete their schooling.
I am thankful to the
donors
who have been with us from the beginning, but we now need additional international support.
We have new resources from generous
donors
worldwide.
Thanks to the efforts of these suppliers and their close partnerships with the GAVI Alliance, multinational vaccine manufacturers, and international donors, more than 100 million children a year – more than ever before – are being immunized.
In the United States, according to the Congressional Budget Office, the budget deficit is on course to triple over the next 30 years, from 2.9% of GDP in 2017 to 9.8% in 2047, owing to the effects of tax cuts and other budget-busting measures implemented to appeal to voters (or, equally important, to appease donors).
That is why we are asking governments and
donors
around the world to give midwifery the attention that it deserves as a commonsense solution to a global health problem.
In Denver, for example, local stations took in $6.5 million to air nearly 5,000 ads paid for by the 2012 presidential candidates’ political action committees (ostensibly independent fund-raising groups that shield their donors’ identity).
Other investments often take precedence, and
donors
have historically funded emergency relief much more readily than pre-disaster preparedness.
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