Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 32— - FOREIGN ASSISTANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS › Part Part II— - Administrative Provisions › § 2394b
Creates a 21-member HELP Around the Globe Commission to study how U.S. development aid is planned, delivered, and measured, and to make recommendations for improvement. The group must review aid goals, who actually benefits and what share of funds reach them, successful programs that could be copied, education and people-focused investments, infrastructure needs, how to set conditions on recipient governments (including with regard to the Millennium Challenge Account), coordination with other donors, worker safety in conflict zones, whether trade can be better than aid, ways to build local NGOs, how to involve people in recipient countries, how to measure results in the poorest countries, rules for “graduating” countries off aid, whether aid should serve foreign-policy goals, and other related topics. The Commission may hold hearings at home and abroad, get information from federal agencies, travel, and hire staff (including an executive director paid at Executive Schedule level V). Members: 6 appointed by the President (at least 2 from NGOs), 4 by the Senate majority leader, 3 by the Senate minority leader, 4 by the House Speaker, 3 by the House minority leader, plus the USAID Administrator. Appointments had to be made within 60 days after January 23, 2004. Members serve for the life of the Commission, which must report its findings and recommendations to the President, Secretary of State, and key Congressional committees within 2 years after appointments. The report can be classified with a public summary. The Commission is unpaid, but members get travel expenses. It ends 30 days after sending its report. Congress may fund the work as needed, and funds remain available until spent but not past the Commission’s end date. Definitions: “United States development assistance” = aid given under chapters 1, 10, 11, and 12 of part I of the Foreign Assistance Act and similar programs. “United States economic assistance” = bilateral economic aid for 11 purposes, including development, helping people under oppressive rule, promoting trade and investment, disaster relief and recovery, refugee protection, environmental work, democracy and governance, peacebuilding, counternarcotics capacity, and other U.S. objectives.
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 2394b
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73