Return to the Homepage
eNewsletter
eBulletin
Plant a Tree Info
CPAR-PAL
     Program Info
World Health Day
     Info
Name
Email
subject
> More Information
> Unsubscribe
> Sign up your
   friends
Canada, like other industrialized nations, provides international development assistance in the form of goods, services, the transfer of knowledge and skills, and financial contributions to developing countries. All of Canada's assistance, with the exception of emergency aid and disaster relief, aims to improve the quality of life for children, women and men in developing countries and countries in transition with sustainable development programs.
Developing countries have made undeniable progress in recent decades. Unfortunately, this progress has been uneven. While some countries have achieved remarkable economic growth and are becoming important trading partners for Canada, others are still very poor. Each country's assistance program is different and depends on a country's needs, its stage of development and capacities. In accordance with its principles, Canada allocates the largest share of its budget to the poorest countries of Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean.
Countries in transition are those of Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, which began the transition from communism to democracy and a market economy in 1989. Canada's encouragement of co-operation is intended to facilitate this transition, which is vital to the region.
Co-operation between Canada and all these countries acts as a catalyst, expediting returns on the efforts and investments made by the countries themselves.
What Aid has done for Developing Countries
   Child mortality rates have been cut in half in one generation.
   For the first time in developing countries, adults who can read outnumber those who cannot.
   Average incomes in the developing world have more than doubled over the past 30 years.
   The number of families with access to safe drinking water has increased to 70 percent.
Canada's Aid Program
The Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) is the federal government agency responsible for about 80 percent of Canada's aid. Established in 1968, it reports to Parliament through the Minister for International Co-operation. The other 20 percent is administered by the Department of Finance and the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, which have responsibility for specific aspects of the aid program, such as our contributions to the World Bank and other international organizations.
Over the next five years, CIDA will strengthen its programming in four areas of social development: health and nutrition, basic education, HIV/AIDS, and child protection. CIDA supports projects in more than 100 countries, which represent four-fifths of the world's people. CIDA works in partnership with developing countries, Canadian organizations, institutions and businesses, as well as international organizations and agencies.
CIDA's Mandate and Priorities
The assistance provided through Canada's aid program is called Official Development Assistance (ODA). The money for ODA comes from the International Assistance Envelope, which is also used to fund other co-operation programs, such as assistance to Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. The purpose of Canada's ODA is to support sustainable development in developing countries, in order to reduce poverty and to contribute to a more secure, equitable and prosperous world. To achieve this, the aid programs concentrate on the following six priorities.
1.   Basic human needs CIDA supports efforts to provide primary health care, basic education, family planning, nutrition, water and sanitation, and shelter.
2.   Women in development CIDA supports the full participation of women as equal partners in the sustainable development of their societies.
3.   Infrastructure services CIDA helps developing countries and countries in transition to deliver environmentally sound infrastructure services - for example, rural electricity and communications - with an emphasis on assisting poorer groups and building capacity.
4.   Human rights, democracy, good governance CIDA works to increase respect for human rights, including children's rights. It promotes democracy and better governance, strengthens the components of civil society such as civic organizations and trade unions, and ensures the security of individuals.
5.   Private sector development CIDA promotes sustained and equitable economic growth by supporting private sector development.
6.   The environment CIDA helps developing countries to protect their environment and to contribute to addressing global and regional issues.
What the Aid Program does for Canadians
Development assistance is a vital component of Canadian foreign policy. By furthering the social and economic development of developing countries or countries in transition, the assistance program contributes to global security and prosperity, including our own. In so doing, it assures Canada a major voice internationally, projects our values, makes our institutions, organizations and businesses known, and establishes ties between Canadian society and developing countries.
Global Security
   Canadian aid contributes to global security by tackling threats to human security, such as human rights violations, disease, population growth, environmental degradation and the growing gap between rich and poor.
   In developing countries, poverty is often the root cause of ecological damage. By reducing poverty, aid helps to protect the global environment. It can also enable all countries to develop in harmony with the environment.
   Poverty is also often a cause of social instability and civil unrest, which in turn can produce flows of refugees and acts of terrorism. Aid helps us build a safer, more peaceful world.
Prosperity and Jobs
   In the long term, our efforts to reduce poverty will facilitate the establishment of a stronger global economy, in which we can all grow and prosper.
   Thanks to the ties created by the aid program, the Canadian economy is directly connected to some of the world's fastest growing markets - the markets of the developing world. The assistance we contribute in goods and services provides jobs, contracts and export sales for Canadians.
Canadian Values
   Our aid program testifies to the desire of Canadians to help the less fortunate and to their concern for social justice. It effectively helps to project these values throughout the world.
The Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and International Co-operation
Communications Canada
Catalogue No. PF3-2/25-2001
ISBN 0-662-65618-0
© Minister of Public Works and Government Services, 2001
www.communication.gc.ca/facts/cida

For more information about CIDA and Canada's aid program, please visit:
www.acdi-cida.gc.ca
Print this Page | Share on Facebook | Email Page to a Friend

Privacy Policy | Terms of Use