Economic crises generally lead to reductions in foreign aid. However, the widely held view that budgetary constraints caused by economic crises reduce aid is inaccurate because donor government outlays actually tend to increase. We develop an argument that aid cuts occur because voters place a lower priority on aid during economic downturns and politicians respond by cutting aid. Using data from Eurobarometer, we demonstrate that economic downturns lead to reduced public support for helping the poor abroad. These findings are robust across a large number of alternative specifications. Our findings have implications for how advocates may prevent aid reductions during economic recessions
This study assesses the relevance of poverty in the determination of aid volumes. In particular, it ...
Global initiatives on debt relief call for increasing foreign aid assistance to alleviate income ine...
Increasingly, it is becoming a given that the only secure basis for world peace and prosperity in th...
Global pandemics are a serious concern for developing countries, perhaps particularly when the same ...
The news-media has been identified as an influence on donor nations’ overseas aid allocations, actin...
Critics of foreign aid programs argue that these funds often support corrupt governments and ineffic...
Does foreign aid shift public spending? Many worry that aid will be “fungible” in the sense that gov...
We present original survey data on preferences for foreign aid in 24 donor countries from 2005 to 20...
Americans think the US foreign aid budget is far too generous. Can information change those views? W...
Analyzing US economic and foreign aid data from 1967 to 2007, this paper investigates whether advers...
To address the relationship between concessional assistance, corruption, and other types of rent-see...
Majorities of citizens in high-income countries often oppose foreign aid spending. One popular expla...
The author studies foreign aid policy within a principal-agent framework. He shows that one reason f...
Contains fulltext : 176122.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Under what cond...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
This study assesses the relevance of poverty in the determination of aid volumes. In particular, it ...
Global initiatives on debt relief call for increasing foreign aid assistance to alleviate income ine...
Increasingly, it is becoming a given that the only secure basis for world peace and prosperity in th...
Global pandemics are a serious concern for developing countries, perhaps particularly when the same ...
The news-media has been identified as an influence on donor nations’ overseas aid allocations, actin...
Critics of foreign aid programs argue that these funds often support corrupt governments and ineffic...
Does foreign aid shift public spending? Many worry that aid will be “fungible” in the sense that gov...
We present original survey data on preferences for foreign aid in 24 donor countries from 2005 to 20...
Americans think the US foreign aid budget is far too generous. Can information change those views? W...
Analyzing US economic and foreign aid data from 1967 to 2007, this paper investigates whether advers...
To address the relationship between concessional assistance, corruption, and other types of rent-see...
Majorities of citizens in high-income countries often oppose foreign aid spending. One popular expla...
The author studies foreign aid policy within a principal-agent framework. He shows that one reason f...
Contains fulltext : 176122.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Under what cond...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
This study assesses the relevance of poverty in the determination of aid volumes. In particular, it ...
Global initiatives on debt relief call for increasing foreign aid assistance to alleviate income ine...
Increasingly, it is becoming a given that the only secure basis for world peace and prosperity in th...