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Should the government increase, maintain or reduce its aid to developing countries?

Published 13 March 2024 in Surveys

FR

Graphic Time-laps Table Methodology
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The amounts which have been used in this survey question (asked three times a year since the end of 2019) are country specific, meaning they might vary according to the periods the survey was conducted.

In France, the percentage of ODA this survey question refers to is the French Gross Domestic Product (GDP), while in Germany, in the UK and in the USA, the percentages refer to the national State budget. This means that if the ODA amounts which have been used for the four countries in this survey rely to the OECD definition, it is difficult to compare the percentages that each of the four DEL’s countries devotes to ODA. Only a comparison between measured trends in favour of increasing, maintaining or decreasing ODA are relevant.

France
 May 2019: 0.43% of 2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of 10 billion
 September 2019: 0.43% of €2,500 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 January 2020: 0.43% of €2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 February 2020: 0.43% of €2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 June 2020: 0.43% of €2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 September 2020: 0.44% of €2,500 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 January 2021: 0.44% of €2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 May 2021: 0.44% of €2,500 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 June 2021: 0.44% of €2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 September 2021: 0.53% of €2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €12.1 billion
 January 2022: 0.44% of €2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 February 2022: 0.53% of €2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €12,1 billion
 June 2022: 0.44% of €2,300 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €11 billion
 September 2022: 0.52% of €2,500 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €13 billion
 January 2023: 0.52% of €2,500 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €13 billion
 February 2023: 0,55% of €2,500 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €15 billion
 June 2023: 0.56% of €2,714 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €15 billion
 September 2023: 0.56% of €2,600 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €15 billion
 January 2024: 0.56% of €2,600 billion GDP, i.e. ODA of €15 billion

Germany
 September 2019: 3,5% of the national State budget (€360 billion), ie. ODA of €12,6 billion
 January 2020: 3,5% of the national State budget (€360 billion), ie. ODA of €12,6 billion
 June 2020: 3,5% of the national State budget (€360 billion), ie. ODA of €12,6 billion
 September 2020: 3,5% of the national State budget (€360 billion), ie. ODA of €12,6 billion
 January 2021: 3,5% of the national State budget (€360 billion), ie. ODA of €12,6 billion
 June 2021: 3,5% of the national State budget (€360 billion), ie. ODA of €12,6 billion
 September 2021: 4,9% of the national State budget (€512 billion), ie. ODA of €24,9 billion
 January 2022: 3,5% of the national State budget (€360 billion), ie. ODA of €12,6 billion
 June 2022: 4,9% of the national State budget (€512 billion), ie. ODA of €24,9 billion
 September 2022: 4,9% of the national State budget (€560 billion), ie. ODA of €27,3 billion
 January 2023: 4,9% of the national State budget (€560 milliards €, soit une APD de 27,3 billion
 June 2023: 4,9% of the national State budget (€560 milliards €, soit une APD de 27,3 billion
 September 2023: 5,5% of the national State budget (€609 billion), ie. ODA of €33,3 billion
 January 2024: 5,5% of the national State budget (€609 billion), ie. ODA of €33,3 billion

United Kingdom
 September 2019: 1,7% of the national State budget (£810 billion), ie. ODA of £14 billion
 January 2020: 1,7% of the national State budget (£810 billion), ie. ODA of £14 billion
 June 2020: 1,7% of the national State budget (£810 billion), ie. ODA of £14 billion
 September 2020: 1,7% of the national State budget (£810 billion), ie. ODA of £14 billion
 January 2021: 1,7% of the national State budget (£810 billion), ie. ODA of £14 billion
 June 2021: 1,7% of the national State budget (£810 billion), ie. ODA of £14 billion
 September 2021: 1% of the national State budget (£1100 billion), ie. ODA of £10,9 billion
 January 2022: 1,7% of the national State budget (£810 billion), ie. ODA of £14 billion
 June 2022: 1% of the national State budget (£1100 billion), ie. ODA of £10,9 billion
 September 2022: 1,1% of the national State budget (£1060 billion), ie. ODA of £11,5 billion
 January 2023: 1,1% of the national State budget (£1060 billion), ie. ODA of £11,5 billion
 June 2023: 1,1% of the national State budget (£1060 billion), ie. ODA of £11,5 billion
 September 2023: 1,1% of the national State budget (£1155 billion), ie. ODA of £13 billion
 January 2024: 1,1% of the national State budget (£1155 billion), ie. ODA of £12,8 billion

United States
 September 2019: 0,8% of the national State budget ($ 4,1 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 January 2020: 0,8% of the national State budget (,1 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 June 2020: 0,8% of the national State budget (,1 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 September 2020: 0,8% of the national State budget ($ 4,1 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 January 2021: 0,8% of the national State budget ($ 4,1 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 June 2021: 0,8% of the national State budget (,1 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 September 2021: 0,5% of the national State budget (,6 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 January 2022: 0,5% of the national State budget (,8 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 June 2022: 0,8% of the national State budget (,1 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 September 2022: 0,5% of the national State budget (,8 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 January 2023: 0,6% of the national State budget (,1 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 June 2023: 0,6% of the national State budget (,1 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 September 2023: 0,9% of the national State budget (,3 trillion), ie. ODA of billion
 January 2024: 0,9% of the national State budget (,3 trillion), ie. ODA of billion

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Segmentation settings by General elections and political ideology

In each of the four countries where the study was conducted, respondents were asked to rate their political ideology by sliding a cursor on a scale ranging from "far left" to "far right".

France

  • From Septembre 2019 to January 2022: vote in the 1st round of the presidential election in 2017 (23rd April)
  • From June 2022: vote in the 1st round of the presidential election in 2022 (10th April)
  • Breakdown by vote in the 1st round of the presidential elections, using the three highest-scoring candidates:
    • Mélenchon (Jean Luc): far left - left
    • Macron (Emmanuel): center left - center - centre right
    • Le Pen (Marine): extreme right

Allemagne

  • From September 2019 to September 2021: vote in the federal election in 2017 (24th September)
  • From October 2021: vote in the federal election in 2021 (26th september)
  • Breakdown by vote in the federal elections, using the three highest-scoring parties/candidates:
    • SPD: left - social democrat/center left
    • CDU/CSU: center right - right
    • AFD: extreme right

Royaume-Uni

  • From September 2019 to December 2019 : vote in the United Kingdom general election in 2017 (8th June)
  • From December 2019 : vote in United Kingdom general election in 2019 (12th December)
  • Breakdown by vote in the United Kingdom general elections, using the three highest-scoring parties:
    • Labour: far left - left
    • Lib-Dems: liberals (social democrat - center/center right)
    • Conservatives : right

Etats-Unis

  • From September 2019 to November 2020: vote in the presidential election in 2016 (8th November)
  • From November 2020: vote in the presidential election in 2020 (3rd November)
  • Breakdown by vote in the presidential elections, using the two dominant candidates/parties:
    • Clinton (Hilary) or Biden (Joe): Democrat Party (left - center left)
    • Trump (Donald): Republican Party (right - extreme right)

For more information about the methodology of the Development Engagement Lab (DEL), please SEE

Information about DEL’s methodology

The Development Engagement Lab (DEL): a quantitative research project

The Development Engagement Lab research project (DEL, 2019-2023) aims to measure and better understand what the general public think about international development issues, and why (and how) they become involved.

The term "development" refers to poverty reduction and development of poor countries but also the Sustainable Development Goals.

The DEL project, which is a second phase of the Aid Attitudes Tracker research project (AAT), will be run over five years. Like the AAT, DEL research will be based principally on quantitative data from opinion polls carried out to measure feelings, opinions, behaviour or expectations of the general public in four countries: France, Germany, the UK and the US.

The results from the DEL project will provide data and information to development actors (development NGOs, Foundations, think tanks, ministries and public institutions) to support the design and delivery of their communication and advocacy.

Focus 2030 is the partner for the DEL project in France. We co-construct the questions and content of the opinion poll, according to the needs of our partners, and then analyse and publish the results. Focus 2030 works with data concerning France specifically but also to produce comparative analysis of France against the other three countries surveyed.

The DEL project, financed by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, is led by Professor Jennifer Hudson of University College London and Professor David Hudson from the University of Birmingham.

There are three different types of polling tools used in the project:

  • The Tracker: to measure trends in answers across all four of the DEL countries (France, Germany, the UK and the US). 10 identical questions are put three times a year over five years to a sample of around 2000 respondents, and once a year to a sample of around 6000 respondents.
  • The Sandbox: to measure views on specific issues to each one of the four countries. For this survey, there are 30 new questions each time, put twice a year to around 2000 respondents.
  • The Panel: finally, to measure views on subjects common to all four countries, this tool contains 60 questions which are put to a panel of around 6000 people once a year.

Methodology

YouGov, which is in charge of conducting the polls, is a opinion polling institute established in 2000 in the UK, with 31 offices in 21 countries (including in France, since November 2011). YouGov has a panel of 5 million people across 28 countries, representing all ages, socio-economic categories and genders. This panel enables a representative sample of national populations for different opinion polls. In France, the panel has 175,000 people.

You can find out more about YouGov here.

Survey methods used by YouGov

YouGov carries out its opinion polls on line, mostly using a system called ‘active sampling’. For each poll, emphasis is on the quality rather than the quantity of respondents.

With this system, restrictions are introduced to ensure that only those people contacted are authorised to participate in the survey. This means that all of the respondents to the survey have been pre-selected by YouGov, from their panel of registered respondents, and only those chosen from the panel can participate.

To represent the French population according to the quota method, YouGov uses socio-demographic data published by the French national statistics bureau, INSEE.

Survey samples for each poll take into account the following categories for respondents:
 age
 gender
 location
 annual income
 level of education

The panel members are recruited from several different channels, such as classic advertising, or through various different websites.

Which respondents take part in DEL surveys?

Various socio-demographic information is recorded for each new panel member.

Respondents have a log-in and password, and can only reply once to each online survey.

Data analysis

Once the survey is complete, the final data are weighted statistically against the national profile of adults aged over 18. The weighting is carried out for age, social class, region, level of education, political votes at recent elections, and political preference.

‘Active sampling’ therefore ensures an accurate and proportional representation in participation in the survey. Combined with statistical weighting, the sample provides representative findings for the whole of the population of the country under study (including those who do not have access to internet).

Presentation of results

Results are presented as a percentage of responses calculated in relation to the representative sample of the adult population in each of the four countries in which DEL surveys are conducted.

For every questions offering a response scale from 0 to 10, responses are presented according to the following groupings: sum of 0 to 3 - sum of 4 to 6 - sum of 7 to 10.

Reimbursement for participation

Respondents earn ‘YouGov points’ each time they take part in a survey. Depending on the size of the survey, taking part in between 10-15 polls will earn around 400 points. 5000 points equal a monetary value of around 56 € (£50). Participants must reach a minimum of 5000 points before being able to claim any kind of reimbursement.

Margin of error

The margin of error for DEL surveys (which involve between 2000 and 6000 respondents) is ± 2%.

Any other questions?

Countries:

USA
France
United Kingdom
Germany



Périods:

September 2023
June 2023
January 2023
September 2022
June 2022
January 2022
September 2021
June 2021
January 2021
September 2020
June 2020
January 2020
September 2019

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Data are from the Development Engagement Lab, a nationally-representative survey(s) conducted by YouGov and produced by University College London and University of Birmingham. The data have been weighted to be representative of the adult population in every country. The notional margin of error is ± 2%. More information on methodology on Focus2030.org - Source : www.developmentcompass.org