The bat chart provides information about how much money was provided by five different organisations to developing countries between 2008 and 2011.
Overall, the financial allocation in organisations 2 witnessed the most dramatic increase, while those from organisation 4 and 5 took the opposite directly. It is also clear that organisation 3 remained the most significant contributor in the first two years, whereas this position belonged to organisation 2 in the latter half of the surveyed period.
In 2008, the largest funding came from organisation 3, amounting to 1.5 billion dollars, followed closely by organisation 2 and 5, at roughly 1.25 billion dollars. Meanwhile, there was no difference in the amount of money allocated by organisation 1 and 4, with respectively figures being 0.6 and 0.7 billion dollars.
After four years, the amount of money provided by organisation 2 registered a sharp growth to an unprecedented over 2.5 billion dollars, becoming by far the highest investment among these organisations. Organisation 1 followed a similar pattern, but to a lesser extent, with money allocation increasing to just 0.75 billion dollars over three years. In contrast, the trend for organisation 4 and 5 was downward, decreasing noticeably to 0.4 and 0.5 billion dollars, respectively. Meanwhile, despite some variations, financial distribution from organisation 3 remained unchanged after four years.
