Foreign aid to Pakistan
Pakistan receives foreign aid from several countries and international organizations.
Education aid
Pakistan received $649 million in aid for education in 2015, the highest it had received so far. the aid had increased from $586 million in 2014 to $649 million in 2015. The paper also reports that Pakistan received the most aid out of all the countries in Southern Asia, with India just behind receiving $589 million in 2015. The biggest part of the aid to Pakistan was given for basic education. Out of the total $649 million, $371 million or 57.16 per cent was given for basic education.Election support
One of the biggest organizations supporting the electoral process in Pakistan is the Election Support Group. ESG is an internationally supported group of interested parties, made 32 specific recommendations to the Election Commission based on the recommendations of 16 international organizations. A meeting was held in October 2009 to present these ideas to the commission. The Commission commissioned ESG to provide them with a recommendations on how to best solve the addressed problems.Saudi Arabia
In 2013, Saudi Arabian government donated to Pakistan to increase its foreign reserves and meet its needs of balance of trade deficit.United States
Former US Ambassador to Pakistan Anne W. Patterson addressed senior bureaucrats at the National Management College and emphasised that the United States will assist Pakistan's new democratic government in the areas of development, stability, and security. In 2008, The United States Agency for International Development in Pakistan, officially announced the signing of an agreement valued at $8.4 million to help ease Pakistan's food crisis.Election support
In 2006, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems implemented a 9 million dollar contract through USAID to install a computerised electoral rolls system for the Pakistani government.USAID, IFES, United Nations Development Programme, and National Democratic Institute for International Affairs have also coordinated a number of initiatives to help train election officials in Pakistan. Part of this activity was the establishment of a Federal Election Academy and a library to support the Election Commission of Pakistan.
Financial aid to Pakistan since the 11 September 2001 attacks
Between 2002 and 2011, US Congress approved $18 billion in military and economic aid from the United States. However the Pakistan Treasury only received $8.647 billion in direct financial payments.In 2007, Bush administration officials alleged that a significant portion of the military aid sent to Pakistan to counter Al Qaeda never made it to the front lines and was instead being used to counter India. In 2008, U.S. officials claimed that nearly 70% of military aid was misspent between 2002 and 2007. In 2008, some criticism surfaced after USAid revealed to the House Foreign Affairs Committee that up to 30% of aid sent to Afghanistan and Pakistan were used on U.S. based contractors and consultants.
Cuts in aid
The Kerry-Lugar Bill passed in 2009 after democratic elections occurred in Pakistan. This bill included $1.5 billion in annual assistance to Pakistan from 2009 through 2014 but required the Pakistani government to take certain steps to fight terrorism within the country in order to receive the funds. In some of the years between 2009 and 2014, the U.S. congress did not allocate the full amount of $1.5 billion.In 2018, the Trump administration cut aid to Pakistan by approximately $300 million, marks the cancellation of all US military aid to Pakistan. Aid cuts continued into the Biden administration, with total civilian aid dropping to less than $200 million in 2022.