The chart highlights the foreign aid from six major countries to industrializing countries through providing them with money in 2008, 2009, and 2010.
Overall, it is evident that supporting developing countries increased in nearly all countries albeit at varying rates, except Nertherlands and Sweden, where the figure declined. USA provided the highest amount of money, with experiencing the most significant growth, while Sweden consistently had the lowest figure.
The majority of supply for developing countries came from USA, UK, Germany, Japan. USA supplied 22 billion dollars in 2008, which is then went down to 18 billion dollars in 2009. Although it rose to 25 billion dollars by 2010, making it the top city. In UK support rose sharply from roughly 8 billion dollars in 2008 to 13 billion dollars by 2010. Germany started at 11 billion dollars, and then it fell marginally to 10 billion dollars in 2009, and eventually it reached 13 billion dollars.
Japan experienced a fluctuation, it started at 11 billion dollars in 2008, and declined to 8 billion dollars in 2009, after which it improved to 11 bllion dollars again in 2010. From 2008 to 2009, the amount of money which is provided by Netherlands grew from 6 billion dollars to 8 billion dollars, after that it decreased negligibly to 7 billion dollars. Sweden, despite having the lowest figures overall, saw a steady increase of 2 billion dollars, from 6 billion dollars to 8 billion dollars, but this figure dropped dramatically to 5 billion dollars in 2010.
