The bar chart illustrates the amount of help in billions of dollars that had come from six developed countries, namely the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, Japan, the Netherlands, and Sweden, to the developing nations between 2008 and 2010.
Overall, amongst all countries, the aid from the US was the highest, and from Sweden it was the lowest, irrespective of the time.
The amount of money that came from the US stood at just above $20 billion in 2008 and slightly decreased to exactly $20 billion in the next year. However, in 2010, the chart has seen a sharp rise to approximately $25 billion. Coming to Germany, the aid was somehow a half of US in 2008 and increased gradually to around $14 billion in 2009 and ended at just under $15 billion in the very next year.
Despite a rise in the amount of dollar rather than Germany in 2008 for the UK and Japan, the graph experienced a sharp decline for the Netherlands and Sweden in that year. Furthermore, the funding from all of the countries also slowly decreased in 2009 and in 2010 for every remaining nation and went down to well under $10 billion for Sweden.
