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Map of Africa highlighting country location.

Country Program Materials

2010 Congressional Budget Justification
The CBJ summarizes USAID activities and funding in Angola.

USAID/Angola Links

Budget Fact Sheet (pdf,41kb)
Country Profile pdf (84kb)
Angola Democracy and Governance Profile pdf (120kb)
Recent Publications & Reports
Global Health: HIV/AIDS
Humanitarian & Disaster Assistance: Complex Emergency

USAID/Angola Mission

Website:
angola.usaid.gov

Mission Director:
Randall G. Peterson

Local Address:
USAID/Angola
Rua Houari Boumedienne, No. 32
Miramar – Luanda
Angola
Tel: 244-222-641-000
Fax: 244-222-641-262


Credit: Alison Bird, USAID/Angola

Under the President’s Malaria Initiative, USAID is providing bed nets, anti-malarial drugs, treatment for pregnant women, and training and capacity-building on diagnosis and treatment. These initiatives will help better protect pregnant women and children under five years old--among the groups most vulnerable to the scourge of malaria.


Angola

OVERVIEW

Angola’s low level of human development is at odds with its potential for economic prosperity, evident in the country's wealth of natural resources. Much of this paradox is explained by the social disruption and physical destruction generated by 27 years of civil war. Angola is continuing the transition toward national reconciliation and peace that was begun in earnest in 2002 and was significantly advanced in September 2008 by successful National Assembly elections. As a potential powerhouse for regional trade and investment, Angola—which is the second largest producer of oil in sub-Saharan Africa and the United States’ sixth largest global source of imported oil—has tremendous agricultural resources and the potential to recover its status as an agricultural exporter and make an important contribution to regional growth and stability. To help Angola realize this potential, USAID focuses on strengthening good governance, increasing economic opportunity, and imrpoving the delivery of social services. USAID leverages several public-private partnerships to co-fund its activities.

PROGRAMS

GOVERNING JUSTLY AND DEMOCRATICALLY

Good governance is the linchpin of USAID’s programs in Angola. Each of our activities, including those to improve the delivery of health care and to expand economic growth, seeks to improve government transparency and accountability. USAID is strengthening linkages among different levels of government, enhancing system reform at the national level; at the community level, we are boosting key social services and economic inputs. USAID is also working to increase economic opportunity and improve budgeting and planning, supervision, information, procurement, and other intra-governmental systems that might improve service delivery. USAID supports the electoral process, civil society engagement, and efforts to consolidate peace, and assists targeted groups such as political parties, the electoral body, civil society organizations, and the media.

INVESTING IN PEOPLE: HEALTH

Angola was selected as one of the first three countries to participate in the President’s Malaria Initiative, which is helping to reduce malaria-related mortality by 50 percent through spraying, the provision of bed nets, and the distribution of malaria treatment. Through a partnership framework signed by Secretary Clinton and the Government of Angola, we strengthen interventions to curb the spread and mitigate the impact of HIV/AIDS. Our programs also seek to improve the quality of reproductive health programs, combat tuberculosis, and eradicate polio. At the systemic level, USAID encourages reform, increases civil society’s ability to address social service needs through community mobilization, improves access to government channels, and promotes more productive interactions between the government and civil society. USAID also supports initiatives that improve access to clean water and sanitation while building the capacity of local actors to manage public resources.

ECONOMIC GROWTH

USAID economic growth programs complement the efforts of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the European Commission to help build the capacity of Angola’s Ministry of Finance to manage the national budget in a more effective, open, and transparent manner. USAID also supports the Catholic University’s independent economic think tank to stimulate dialogue on issues of national concern. USAID also supports people-focused and system-focused efforts to increase access to resources, especially finance and property rights, and USAID technical assistance is helping the government and civil society establish new land registration regulations.

To promote systemic reform and ensure sustained economic growth, USAID works with the Central Bank and commercial banks on financial sector reforms in policy, procedure, and capacity-building to encourage commercial banks to expand the number of products on offer and increase their willingness and ability to lend to small- and medium-sized borrowers. In agriculture, USAID is activating the value chain—from production through processing and transport to marketing—to link entrepreneurs and banana and coffee farmers to sources of credit, inputs, and markets.

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