โ Back to Acts
Foreign Assistance Act (FAA)
1961Pub. L. 87โ195; codified at 22 U.S.C. ยง 2151 et seq.
๐ Link to the Text of the Act
๐ Why It Was Done
The FAA was enacted to reorganize U.S. foreign aid programs and establish the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). It separated military and non-military aid and created a framework for economic and humanitarian assistance.
๐ Pre-existing Law or Constitutional Rights
Prior aid programs like the Marshall Plan were temporary. The FAA created a permanent structure for U.S. foreign assistance tied to Cold War strategy and international development.
๐ Overreach or Proper Role?
Supporters see it as vital for diplomacy, development, and national security. Critics argue it fosters dependency, enables corruption abroad, and sometimes advances U.S. political interests over humanitarian goals.
๐ Who or What It Controls
- โขUSAID (primary civilian foreign aid agency)
- โขState Department (coordinates with foreign policy)
- โขForeign governments and NGOs (recipients of aid funding)
- โขU.S. taxpayers (fund the programs)
๐ Key Sections / Citations
- โข22 U.S.C. ยง 2151: Congressional statement of purpose
- โข22 U.S.C. ยง 2301: Military assistance provisions
- โข22 U.S.C. ยง 2395: Authority for appropriations
๐ Recent Changes or Live Controversies
- โขContinues to fund global health, disaster relief, democracy promotion, and development
- โขDebates about foreign aid effectiveness, corruption, and accountability
- โขUsed in discussions of U.S. involvement in Ukraine, Middle East, and Africa
๐ Official Sources
- โข
- โข
- โข