The line graph compares the amount of monetary aid provided by four different organizations to developing countries between 2008 and 2011.
Overall, Organization B showed the most significant growth, becoming the largest donor by the end of the period. In contrast, aid from Organization D consistently remained the lowest, while Organizations A and C displayed more modest and fluctuating patterns.
At the beginning of the period, Organizations A and C contributed similar amounts, both standing at around 1.2 billion dollars. Organization A’s donations declined slightly to just over 1 billion dollars in 2010, before recovering to about 1.3 billion by 2011. Meanwhile, Organization C rose marginally to 1.4 billion in 2009, then dipped in 2010 before rebounding to the same level in the final year.
In contrast, Organization B’s financial aid increased markedly. Starting at 1.2 billion dollars in 2008, it overtook the others in 2009 and climbed sharply to 2.8 billion in 2010, before peaking at 3 billion dollars in 2011, making it the leading donor. On the other hand, Organization D consistently gave the least support. It began at half a billion dollars in 2008, fell slightly in 2009, and despite a minor recovery afterwards, it never exceeded 0.7 billion over the entire period.
