Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 100— - GLOBAL FOOD SECURITY › § 9307
Every fiscal year through 2028, the President must send a report to certain congressional committees that explains how the Global Food Security Strategy was carried out the previous year. The report must include a short summary appendix, note any major changes and reasons (including changes to which countries are targeted), and describe progress. It must show the main numbers and goals used, the baselines, and yearly results for those measures, broken down by age, gender, and disability when possible. The report must also explain plans for moving countries or communities off aid over time, how monitoring and evaluation affected program and budget choices, and give a clear, disaggregated gender analysis. It must provide a transparent, detailed accounting of spending by each federal agency (including the legal source of funds, amounts spent inside and outside target countries, partners, and beneficiaries), say how the strategy links with other U.S. food aid and development programs, describe impacts on things like land rights and opportunities for women and small farmers, report on coordination with stakeholders and on U.S.-facilitated private investment and donor burden sharing, explain how agricultural research is prioritized, name any U.S. legal or regulatory barriers to effective work, outline a plan for regular reviews and lessons learned, and—during the final year of each strategy—complete country graduation reports. Within 120 days after the President submits the federal budget to Congress, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget must give those committees an interagency budget crosscut. That report must show proposed funding and planned transfers for each main federal agency for the coming year, list account-level assistance and research spending for the five prior fiscal years when available, provide a detailed accounting of current-year assistance received and obligated, and break out proposed budgets by agency and by type of funding (for example research and resiliency). All of the information described above must be posted on USAID’s public website in a timely way in an open, machine-readable format.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
22 U.S.C. § 9307
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73