Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Indian-American Giving Could Dwarf US Aid To India: Report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2015 11:43 AM
    The Indian-American diaspora among the top ten percent earners in the US has the capacity to give to India at levels that could dwarf official US development aid there, according to a new report.
     
    Indian-Americans are expanding their philanthropy from giving to family and community to giving to broader-based social causes aimed at addressing India's most challenging problems, noted the report released Monday by the Bridgespan Group.
     
    Approximately 3.5 million Indian-Americans and their children are living in the US States. The India-born population is a rapidly evolving and fast-growing diaspora group, noted the Group, an advisor for not-for-profit organizations and philanthropists.
     
    "The Indian diaspora in the United States is positioned to help now more than ever before," said Rohit Menezes, a Bridgespan partner who leads the organization's India office.
     
    "Indian immigrants have fared well and amassed significant wealth. It is our aim to encourage donors to give more to India and to do so more effectively," he said.
     
    The report notes that Indian-headed households have a median annual income of $89,000 (compared to a US median of $50,000), and 27 percent of Indian households earn more than $140,000, putting them in the top 10 percent of earners nationally.
     
    The combined annual discretionary income of Americans of Indian origin is approximately $67.4 billion.
     
    "If their philanthropic contributions were consistent with those of other US households in similar income brackets, and they directed 40 percent of their philanthropy to India, $1.2 billion per year would flow from Indian diaspora donors to Indian causes, as compared to current US foreign aid to India ($116.4 million in FY 2014)," the report noted.
     
    And it represents over half the entire amount of annual official development aid received by India from all countries-$2.2 billion, on average, from 2005 through 2013.
     
    The report also points to significant nonfinancial assets the diaspora community has to offer.
     
    "Indian-Americans are highly educated and well represented in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) professions, in technology and entrepreneurship, and increasingly occupy roles of political and social influence in the US," said Menezes.
     
    "This achievement, combined with familiarity with Indian culture and communities, positions Indian-Americans well to increase involvement in building the capacity and professionalism of India's civil society organizations and the philanthropic entities that support them."
     
    The Bridgespan Group along with Stanford Social Innovation Review and Dasra have also launched "Impact India "- a joint publication on strategic philanthropy in India.
     
    It represents trends in giving by Indian-Americans back to India, and the impact of these funding flows. The giving could also be in non-monetary terms.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Mirror power! Try on clothes even when shop is closed

    Mirror power! Try on clothes even when shop is closed
    How about trying on clothes via shop windows even when the shutters are down? This could soon be a reality thanks to new research led by an...

    Mirror power! Try on clothes even when shop is closed

    Exhausted doctors prescribe more antibiotics in evenings: Study

    Exhausted doctors prescribe more antibiotics in evenings: Study
    Exhausted by morning and afternoon clinic sessions, physicians are more likely to prescribe antibiotics for respiratory infections later in the day, says a study....

    Exhausted doctors prescribe more antibiotics in evenings: Study

    Kids understand familiar voices better

    Kids understand familiar voices better
    "This study shows that children were able to integrate knowledge of what a person sounds like and use this to their advantage," said study author Susannah...

    Kids understand familiar voices better

    Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!

    Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!
    "Showing off a hangover and to prove illness to friends or co-workers emerged as the most common reasons for uploading a...

    Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!

    Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers

    Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers
    They tracked these users from November 2013 to April 2014, filtered the data and arrived at a group of 661 pairs, who had been in...

    Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers

    Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive

    Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive
    In a rare incident, a man presumed killed by Ebola in Liberia regained consciousness when he was lifted into a body bag by a burial team, it was reported Sunday....

    Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive