http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0823-03.htm
Published on Tuesday, August 23, 2005 by Inter Press Service

Least Church-Going Rich Countries Give Most

By Jim Lobe

 

WASHINGTON - Nations where fewer people attend church tend to be more 
generous in their support for development in poor countries than 
those where church attendance is much greater, according to the third 
annual edition of the "Commitment to Development Index (CDI)", 
published this week in Foreign Policy magazine.

The US Treasury last year imposed nearly two billion dollars in 
tariffs on imports from the four countries that were most affected by 
the tsunami -- India, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and Thailand -- twice the 
900 million dollars in relief aid approved by the U.S. Congress for 
the same countries last May.

The Index, a joint project of Washington-based Foreign Policy and the 
Center for Global Development (CGD), found that Denmark, the 
Netherlands, Sweden, Australia, and Norway retained their top 
rankings among wealthy countries for their helpfulness to poor 
countries from last year. Italy, Ireland, Greece and Japan were the 
least helpful of the 21 countries ranked by the Index.

The Index also noted that both the 12 billion dollars in private and 
public aid pledged by wealthy countries and their citizens for 
victims of last December's devastating tsunami and the debt relief 
deal announced earlier this summer for some of the world's poorest 
countries contributed to improved performance by most donors.

At the same time, it stressed that both steps were actually quite 
limited in their impact when other factors, such as trade barriers, 
that also make up the complexity of interaction between rich and poor 
countries are taken into consideration.

It noted, for example, that the U.S. Treasury last year imposed 
nearly two billion dollars in tariffs on imports from the four 
countries that were most affected by the tsunami -- India, Indonesia, 
Sri Lanka, and Thailand -- twice the 900 million dollars in relief 
aid approved by the U.S. Congress for the same countries last May.

"If rich countries really want to commit themselves to improving the 
lives of citizens in tsunami-affected nations, they should end these 
taxes and other protectionist barriers as part of the current Doha 
Round of international trade negotiations," according to a Foreign 
Policy comment that noted the single-most far-reaching improvement in 
this year's Index derived from the abolition last Jan. 1 of quotas on 
textile imports by the U.S., Canada and the European Union (EU).

The Index assesses the performance over recent years of 
industrialized countries according to seven criteria -- public and 
private aid flows, trade, investment, migration, environment, 
security and peacekeeping, and technology -- that have a major impact 
on the welfare of poor countries. Scores for each criterion are then 
added up for each country to determine its ranking.

In addition, multiple factors may be used to determine the score 
within any given category. For the aid category, for example, Index 
analysts considered not only donors' total official development 
assistance (ODA) as a percentage of their gross domestic product 
(GDP), but also how much of their ODA was "tied" to the purchase of 
goods or services from donor nations, and how much they received in 
debt repayments, as well as private or charitable giving.

While the United States was the most generous in terms of its private 
giving -- citizens gave an average of six cents a day to private 
charities that financed overseas aid -- U.S. ODA averaged only 15 
cents per day per person, bringing the total to 21 cents/day/person. 
By contrast, Denmark, the leading aid-giver, spent an average of 90 
cents/day/person, 89 cents of which came from the government and only 
one cent from private sources.

In aid terms Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and the Netherlands led the 
other 17 donor countries by a wide margin. The worst performer was 
Japan, followed by Italy, the United States, New Zealand, and 
Australia in that order.

With the exception of Japan, the worst performers on aid were the 
best performers on trade, according to the Index. New Zealand was 
found to have the most open market to developing country goods. It 
was followed by Australia, Canada, and the United States. Of the EU 
countries, Italy received the highest ranking.

Japan, on the other hand, had the most closed market, followed by 
Norway and Switzerland, according to the Index.

On investment policies -- both those that are designed to facilitate 
investment flows to poor countries and ensure that they promote 
development, top-ranking countries included Britain, Canada, Italy, 
the Netherlands, Germany and the U.S., in that order, while the worst 
performers were Ireland, Austria, New Zealand, and Greece.

On migration, which assessed the net inflow of people from poor 
countries to wealthy ones, the aid provided by host governments to 
refugees and asylum seekers, and the percentage of students from 
developing countries among the total foreign student population, 
Switzerland and Austria tied for the highest ranking, followed by New 
Zealand and Germany. Portugal was the worst performer, followed by 
Greece, Japan, Italy and Finland.

On environmental policies, Britain was rated the best performer, 
followed by Germany, Portugal, and the Netherlands, while Japan was 
rated the worst, followed by the United States, Norway, and Canada.

On security, for which points were awarded for participation in 
peacekeeping operations and humanitarian intervention authorized by 
multilateral bodies, such as the United Nations or NATO, Australia 
and Norway tied for the top ranking, followed by New Zealand, Denmark 
and the Netherlands. Switzerland was ranked lowest, followed by 
France and Japan.

On technology, which was based on donors' support for non-military 
research and development programs, Canada, Finland, France received 
the highest marks, while Ireland and Greece trailed the pack.

Index researchers subsequently matched their results against the 
World Values Survey, which tracks social and cultural changes around 
the world, and found that those donor countries that were most 
supportive of development in poor countries were also less likely to 
have high rates of church attendance.

Denmark received the highest Index rating, yet only three percent of 
Danes attend church at least once a week -- the lowest attendance 
rate of all 21 donor nations. While church attendance rose to 14 
percent in second-place Netherlands, Sweden (3), Norway (5), and 
Finland (6) all had church attendance rates well below 10 percent.

Meanwhile, the most religiously observant country, Ireland -- where 
nearly two-thirds of the population attend church at least once a 
week -- ranked 19 in the Index, while the next two most-observant 
nations, the United States and Italy, ranked 12 and 18, respectively.

"It's often said that one should love they neighbor as one lives 
oneself," according to Foreign Policy, which noted in reference to 
the Index findings, however, that "where there is more preaching, 
there is less practicing."

© 2005 IPS - Inter Press Service

###

_______________________________________________
Biofuel mailing list
Biofuel@sustainablelists.org
http://sustainablelists.org/mailman/listinfo/biofuel_sustainablelists.org

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Search the combined Biofuel and Biofuels-biz list archives (50,000 messages):
http://www.mail-archive.com/biofuel@sustainablelists.org/

Reply via email to