Norway and Ukraine receive the most aid

One of Caritas Spes' engineers inspects a home that needs new windows

The government has once again broken its promise to allocate 1% of Norway's income to international aid. To achieve this, NOK 4.5 billion is missing.

Det sa generalsekretær Ingrid Rosendorf Joys da hun var i Stortingets Utenrikskomité for å legge frem våre innspill til neste års statsbudsjett.

We are disappointed that Norway is once again the second largest recipient of its own aid funds, due to spending on refugees. Increased funding for refugees in Norway is positive, but it is reprehensible that it is being withdrawn from the aid budget, which is intended to combat poverty.

Flere kriser har tvunget over 117 millioner på flukt. Konfliktene i Ukraina, Midtøsten og Sudan skaper store humanitære lidelser.

Budsjettfordelingen viser at «vinnerne» i 2025-budsjettet er Ukraina og Norge, som mottar 21,8 % av den samlede bistanden. Støtten til Ukraina er riktig og viktig, men det er problematisk at hjelpen går på bekostning av mennesker i land med store humanitære behov.

Cuts in support for local areas

Nor does it send a good signal to other donor countries that Norway prioritizes neither helping refugees at home nor in the surrounding areas at a time when migration is shaping political development and causing indescribable human suffering. We recall that this funding gap has previously been temporarily closed through the so-called South Package in the Nansen Program.

Sudanese refugees on the border with Chad
Caritas Mongo assists refugees from Sudan on the border with Chad (Photo: Caritas Mongo)

The funding gap must be filled

Humanitarian funding is insufficient in the government's proposed budget. In the first half of 2024, only 16 percent of the global need was covered. The gap must be filled. But humanitarian crises are best solved with long-term policies. That's why it's disappointing, short-sighted and costly that the item for peace and reconciliation is being cut, when the need for conflict resolution has never been greater.

Female aid worker from Caritas Mali visits tent camp with internally displaced people
Female aid worker from Caritas Mali visits tent camp with internally displaced people (Photo: Pablo Reyero Aubareda/Caritas)

Less support for Africa

Caritas welcomes the NOK 300 million increase for food security and climate adaptation. The fight against hunger is crucial to ensuring dignity and achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals. In light of growing global needs, this is necessary. At the same time, it should go without saying, given the great needs and Norway's strong economy.

But when the government also reduces the regional appropriation for Africa and support for refugees in the surrounding areas, which has also financed food security projects, by NOK 900 million, we question how significant the investment in food security is.