Friday, December 31, 2004

Those Stingy Americans

By Matt for the TIB Network:

This is a handy reference for those of you doing battle with whomever your equivelent of our Peter van P. is...

5:25 PM Update

Interesting press release from the Hudson Institute:
Hudson Institute Senior Fellows Carol Adelman and Jeremiah Norris argue that no, Americans are not stingy. We are generous -- not only through our government but primarily through our private charities. Using the right measures, Americans are the most generous people in the world.

Americans help people abroad the same way they help people at home -- primarily through their churches, philanthropies, foundations, universities, and corporations. They prefer people-to-people programs over government-to-government programs, since they are more direct, nimble and quick.

This type of people-to-people giving was more than three and one-half times U.S. government giving abroad in 2002 (the last year comparable figures are available). Private foreign giving reached more than $35 billion. Even this is a low estimate, for a number of reasons explained in the full presentation of this research, conducted by Hudson Institute and published in Foreign Affairs ("The Privatization of Foreign Aid" by Carol C. Adelman, November/December 2003) and the Wall Street Journal, ("America's Helping Hand," by Carol C. Adelman, August 21, 2002.)

Each year the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) measures countries' generosity by comparing each country's official foreign aid as a percentage of GNP. The U.S. ranks last in this because this measure does not encompass the huge amount of international private giving by Americans. Each year, this OECD report results in press releases and statements disparaging America's "stinginess."

But using only government foreign aid is a limited, outdated and inaccurate way of measuring Americans' generosity. Given the enormous growth in private giving around the world, donors and commentators should re-evaluate the measure.
Which is really what I've been trying to say all along.

Really, the story shouldn't be about who gives what, but rather that the assistance gets to where it is needed.

Islamofascism Delenda Est!