Bread March-April 2014 | Page 2

from page 1 Joseph Molieri/Bread for the World PFDA Poverty-focused development assistance comes in the form of emergency aid after major disasters as well as long-term development. While the former type of assistance is immediate and obvious in its impact, the latter is crucial in helping children have better lives as they grow up. parts—“accounts” in government-speak—collectively as “poverty-focused development assistance,” or PFDA for short. PFDA accounts fund programs that reduce poverty and that carry out development and humanitarian assistance. These programs help to lift millions of people out of hunger, poverty, and disease around the world. The work takes a wide variety of forms—agricultural development and nutrition, emergency humanitarian assistance, global health, education, gender equality, and water and sanitation, and more. PFDA accounts provide long-term, sustainable solutions to the problems of poverty and hunger. And these investments are yielding impressive results: Since 1990, improvements in child nutrition have led to a 37 percent drop in stunting, and there has been a 34 percent reduction in global hunger as well. PFDA programs improve the lives of hungry and poor people in developing countries and lay the foundation for future generations to live in a more prosperous and peaceful world. Going deeper Budget-watching may sound tedious, but fortunately, our analysts and partners regularly pore through the hundreds of pages that comprise the federal budget to tell us which programs are in danger of being cut or will be increased. This vigilance–and your advocacy–has been especially valuable in the past three years as we faced unprecedented attacks from Congress to balance the budget on the backs of hungry and poor people. With your support, we have blunted the impact of these proposed budget cuts. In fact, we have actually increased funds for PFDA. In FY 2014, PFDA increased by more than $800 million for a total of $21.4 billion. Funding for such programs vital to women, children, and small farmers all 2 Bread | March-April 2014 over the world actually tripled from FY 2000 (see figures in infographic on back page). Within the federal budget, we especially monitor what is called the 150 Account, or the International Affairs Budget, funded through the State and Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill. This is where the bulk of PFDA programs are authorized. They are then implemented through such agencies and programs as the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the Department of State, the Department of Agriculture, and the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC). And here’s an astonishing fact: These programs comprise less than 1 percent of the entire federal budget! Yet they provide lifesaving programs for millions of hungry and poor people, bolster U.S. national security, and promote trade and job creation both here and abroad. Ironically, many Americans believe the myth that that we spend more than 25 percent of the federal budget on foreign aid. Again, in reality, it’s less than 1 percent! Importance of engaging in the process As budget negotiations go on through the year, we have to strengthen the circle of protection around the funding for these programs that are so vital to hungry and poor people all over the world. At any time during the budgeting process, there will be attempts to drastically reduce such programs in an attempt to balance the federal budget. The federal budg ]