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Development Co-operation Profiles

image of Development Co-operation Profiles

The OECD’s Development Co-operation Profiles compile and analyse verified statistics and trends on how development assistance is allocated geographically, to sectors, multilateral and civil society organisations, cross-cutting priorities such as gender equality and women’s economic empowerment and the environment and climate, and to mobilise private finance. The profiles cover official and philanthropic providers of aid, official development assistance (ODA) and development finance. These providers include members of the OECD and its Development Assistance Committee (DAC), other countries and philanthropic foundations. The profiles also give an overview of key strategic and policy priorities for development co-operation, the institutional set-up and evaluation systems.

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Israel

Israel launched its official international development co-operation programme in 1958 to share the expertise and technologies driving its own rapid development with other developing countries. Development co-operation is led and implemented by the Agency for International Development Cooperation (MASHAV), a division of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Most of Israel’s aid is allocated through government channels to capacity building and humanitarian assistance worldwide. Israel’s total official development assistance (ODA) (USD 376.7 million, preliminary data) decreased in 2023, representing 0.07% of gross national income (GNI). DAC members adopted the grant-equivalent methodology starting from their reporting of 2018 data as a more accurate way to count the donor effort in development loans. See the methodological notes for further details.

English

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