Donors
in sentence
690 examples of Donors in a sentence
International policies, including the lending decisions of the World Bank and regional development banks, must evolve, as do the strategies of the UN and bilateral
donors.
Bilateral
donors
could do more as well.
Yet poor countries – or
donors
acting on behalf of the poor – cannot pay the same prices paid by rich countries.
If they are to be met,
donors
must also deliver on their commitments for significant increases in aid.
The IMF has long called on
donors
to meet the internationally accepted target for overseas development assistance of 0.7% of GDP.
Some
donors
have now promised to do so, though only over time; others are not ready to go that far, but have promised more aid than they currently give.
If
donors
keep giving only a little bit of help, but not enough to solve the problems of the poorest countries, these countries will never escape poverty's grip.
Moreover, despite support from the UN and international donors, police officers often lack basic supplies, including vehicles to get to crime scenes and even notebooks to record complaints.
In particular,
donors
should focus on building the capacity of police officers and court officials, while supporting the government’s efforts to provide the infrastructure and equipment needed to enforce the law.
Global decision-makers such as governments and
donors
are faced with competing priorities, but often they do not explicitly or transparently choose among them.
In some countries, overt corruption occurs primarily through campaign contributions that oblige politicians to repay major
donors
with favors.
In late March, Moldova was also promised €1.9 billion by the European Union, the United States, the IMF, the World Bank, and other
donors
to support a strategy of reforms under the banner “Rethink Moldova.”
But there is still an urgent need to address the outsize role of large
donors.
The government and
donors
have a joint responsibility to pursue a more cautious approach that guarantees quality service delivery.
The Women Deliver conference in May is the next global opportunity to push for more action and for
donors
to demonstrate their commitment.
We encourage
donors
to follow through on their commitments to increase effective aid for trade – assistance to help developing countries take full advantage of trade opportunities as a lever for growth.
The World Bank and other foreign
donors
supply half of the Ugandan government's budget, but a third of the money is wasted on senseless military actions such as Uganda's invasion of the Congo.
The adoption of the MDGs focused increased attention by African governments, non-governmental organizations, UN agencies, international donors, foundations, and activists on the urgency of combating poverty, hunger, and disease.
The MDGs applied mainly to poor countries as implementers and to rich countries as
donors.
The SDGs should apply to all countries as implementers (and also to rich countries as donors).
The approach, called the International Finance Facility for Education (IFFEd), aims to leverage countries’ own investments in education with support from public and private
donors.
The IFFEd program, which was acknowledged by the G20 last year, would secure financial guarantees from
donors
in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere to increase the lending capacities of multilateral development banks in Africa and Asia.
Right-wing groups supporting annexation, meanwhile, receive lavish support from the government, as well as from foreign Jewish
donors.
Yet, because beneficiary governments are so hungry for aid dollars, they are usually all too eager to follow the agendas prepared by
donors
and their contractors.
This trust is something Western
donors
have never placed a premium on earning.
In Pakistan, mullahs raise funds from their communities and from official and private
donors
in the wealthy oil-producing countries.
Yet
donors
have contributed only $200 million so far – $100 million less than is needed.
Our country has been fortunate to receive funding in recent years from bilateral
donors
and international organizations like GPE, which helps countries like mine increase educational quality and broaden access.
But the IEA outlines another possible future – what it calls the “African Century” – in which Africa’s governments and
donors
invest an extra $450 billion in energy.
Deaton suggests that far too often, Western aid serves to assuage donors’ guilt rather than improve recipients’ plight.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Countries
International
Governments
Other
Support
Development
Which
Government
Should
Would
Billion
Organizations
Resources
Funding
Private
There
Programs
Education
Provide