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Sunday July 6, 2008

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Past Event

A Global Economy and Development Event

U.S. Foreign Aid: The Need for Fundamental Reform

Foreign Assistance Reform, Foreign Aid, Development, Global Economics, Global Poverty

Event Summary

On July 27, 2007, Brookings' Foreign Assistance Reform Project hosted an event in the U.S. Capitol on the need to fundamentally reform U.S. foreign aid. As a critical instrument of American power and a key determinant of the face of America seen by people around the world, foreign aid must be up to the task of addressing 21st century challenges. To develop bold recommendations for reform, Congress established the Helping to Enhance the Livelihood of People Around the Globe, or HELP Commission. This event featured members of Congress, representatives of the HELP Commission, and former USAID Administrators. The audience consisted of Senate and House appropriation staff and authorization staff, as well as high-level administration officials, NGO executives and other foreign assistance stakeholders.

While U.S. spending on foreign assistance has seen its greatest increase in 40 years, foreign aid policy has become incoherent and implementation fragmented. Event participants discussed this and other topics such as the role of USAID, the current changes implemented by the Bush administration, the cooperation necessary between Congress and the Executive Branch, the possible shape of alternative institutional arrangements, and more.

Event Information

When

Friday, July 27, 2007
12:00 AM to

Where

Falk Auditorium
U.S Capitol Building
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials


Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

 

Transcript

DR. BRAINARD: Thanks everybody for making it out this morning. I think this session could not come at a more important time. This is a very pivotal moment for shaping how America engages with the world and also provides an opportunity for America to show more compassion and a cooperative face to the world.

Foreign assistance comes right at the center, I think, of that agenda. When it is designed and executed well, foreign assistance is not just soft power, but it is smart power. It works to advance our national security, but also our national interests and our national values.

Participants

Introductions

Frank R. Wolf

Congressman (R-VA)

Nita M. Lowey

Congresswoman (D-NY)

Panelists

George Ingram (Moderator)

Vice President, Academy for Educational Development
President, U.S. Global Leadership Campaign

J. Brian Atwood

Dean, Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota

Lael Brainard

Vice President and Director, Global Economy and Development

M. Peter McPherson

President, The National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges

Remarks

Gayle E. Smith

Member, HELP Commission

Mary K. Bush

Chair, HELP Commission

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