Grants, excluding technical cooperation (BoP, current US$) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Grants are defined as legally binding commitments that obligate a specific value of funds available for disbursement for which there is no repayment requirement. Data are in current U.S. dollars.

Source: World Bank, International Debt Statistics, and OECD.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Ethiopia 2,720,940,000.00 2019
2 Dem. Rep. Congo 2,643,590,000.00 2019
3 Nigeria 1,988,600,000.00 2019
4 Somalia 1,800,740,000.00 2019
5 Uganda 1,483,360,000.00 2019
6 Kenya 1,456,640,000.00 2019
7 Mozambique 1,421,020,000.00 2019
8 Tanzania 1,392,670,000.00 2019
9 Sudan 1,257,720,000.00 2019
10 Mali 1,122,020,000.00 2019
11 Niger 1,058,790,000.00 2019
12 Malawi 959,380,000.00 2019
13 Zimbabwe 923,910,000.00 2019
14 Burkina Faso 823,550,000.00 2019
15 Zambia 701,740,000.00 2019
16 Central African Republic 691,580,000.00 2019
17 Côte d'Ivoire 688,300,000.00 2019
18 Rwanda 679,540,000.00 2019
19 Ghana 641,880,000.00 2019
20 South Africa 608,300,000.00 2019
21 Cameroon 571,440,000.00 2019
22 Chad 543,000,000.00 2019
23 Egypt 498,350,000.00 2019
24 Madagascar 489,920,000.00 2019
25 Burundi 474,690,000.00 2019
26 Tunisia 451,190,000.00 2019
27 Senegal 447,270,000.00 2019
28 Sierra Leone 433,450,000.00 2019
29 Morocco 426,650,000.00 2019
30 Liberia 418,690,000.00 2019
31 Benin 413,170,000.00 2019
32 Eritrea 349,650,000.00 2019
33 Guinea 348,370,000.00 2019
34 Libya 269,780,000.00 2019
35 Togo 248,060,000.00 2019
36 Mauritania 238,800,000.00 2019
37 Djibouti 184,610,000.00 2019
38 Angola 158,040,000.00 2019
39 The Gambia 142,300,000.00 2019
40 Lesotho 120,790,000.00 2019
41 Algeria 97,870,000.00 2019
42 Congo 95,910,000.00 2019
43 Namibia 92,950,000.00 2019
44 Guinea-Bissau 84,740,000.00 2019
45 Comoros 80,150,000.00 2019
46 Eswatini 79,440,000.00 2019
47 Botswana 64,370,000.00 2019
48 Cabo Verde 53,900,000.00 2019
49 Mauritius 41,370,000.00 2019
50 São Tomé and Principe 33,990,000.00 2019
51 Gabon 14,640,000.00 2019
52 Seychelles 13,750,000.00 2017
53 Equatorial Guinea 12,570,000.00 2019

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Development Relevance: DAC exists to help its members coordinate their development assistance and to encourage the expansion and improve the effectiveness of the aggregate resources flowing to recipient economies. In this capacity DAC monitors the flow of all financial resources, but its main concern is official development assistance (ODA). Grants or loans to countries and territories on the DAC list of aid recipients have to meet three criteria to be counted as ODA. They are provided by official agencies, including state and local governments, or by their executive agencies. They promote economic development and welfare as the main objective. And they are provided on concessional financial terms (loans must have a grant element of at least 25 percent, calculated at a discount rate of 10 percent). The DAC Statistical Reporting Directives provide the most detailed explanation of this definition and all ODA-related rules. OECD's IDS database provides a set of readily available basic data that enables analysis on where aid goes, what purposes it serves and what policies it aims to implement, on a comparable basis for all DAC members. The aid data is most commonly used to analyze the sectoral and geographical breakdown of aid for selected years and donors or groups of donors. The data can also be used to target specific policy issues (e.g. tying status of aid) and monitor donors' compliance with various international recommendations in the field of development co-operation.

Limitations and Exceptions: Data on ODA is for aid-receiving countries. The data cover loans and grants from DAC member countries, multilateral organizations, and non-DAC donors. They do not reflect aid given by recipient countries to other developing countries. As a result, some countries that are net donors (such as Saudi Arabia) are shown as aid recipients. The indicator does not distinguish types of aid (program, project, or food aid; emergency assistance; or post-conflict peacekeeping assistance), which may have different effects on the economy. Because the indicator relies on information from donors, it is not necessarily consistent with information recorded by recipients in the balance of payments, which often excludes all or some technical assistance - particularly payments to expatriates made directly by the donor. Similarly, grant commodity aid may not always be recorded in trade data or in the balance of payments. Moreover, DAC statistics exclude aid for military and antiterrorism purposes. The aggregates refer to World Bank classifications of economies and therefore may differ from those of the OECD.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Grants are transfers made in cash, goods or services for which no repayment is required. Data excludes technical cooperation grants. The flows of official and private financial resources from the members of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to developing economies are compiled by DAC, based principally on reporting by DAC members using standard questionnaires issued by the DAC Secretariat. A network of statistical correspondents collects data from aid agencies and government departments (central, state and local) on an ongoing basis. Their task is also to ensure that reporting conforms to the Reporting Directives (definitions and classifications) agreed by the DAC. The official development assistance (ODA) estimates are published annually at the end of the calendar year in International Development Statistics (IDS) database. Data are in current U.S. dollars.

Aggregation method: Sum

Periodicity: Annual