There may well be states where additional
targeted grant aid would be a better use of marginal increases in expenditures than additional appropriations to institutions (i.e., the additional spending may do more, on a per - dollar basis, to further policymakers» goals).
Not exact matches
At the same time, MEXT is
targeting US$ 2.4 billion — a 5.8 % increase — to
grants - in -
aid for scientific research to fund individuals, universities, and research centers.
It would be much more straightforward to provide new
targeted aid through an expanded version of the Pell
grant program, which could also be made more simple, transparent, and easy to access (e.g., by eliminating the FAFSA and using income tax records to determine eligibility).
Grant aid has the potential advantage to be more effectively
targeted, such as to low - income students, so as to maximize its impact on individual behavior.
The administration says the program is «a less well -
targeted way to deliver need - based
aid» than Pell
grants.
Granted, this data may be affected by a number of different factors — merit - based scholarships do not typically take family income into account, for instance — but the research is upsetting enough to leave some educators and families wondering whether universities are
targeting and enticing wealthy students with scholarship
aid, while not offering as much funding to students in need.
The Adaptation Fund has very little resources; The Green Climate Fund is Empty (GCF); technology transfer is not successful because of the Intellectual Property Rights are being held tightly by Europe and the US; the 30 billion dollars for fast start finance is not all new and additional, most of it is repackaged Official Development
Aid (ODA) and is mostly loans rather than
grants; there is no clear plan to address the incredibly low
target of 100 billion dollars annually that is needed by 2020 for long term finance, developed countries do not even want to engage in a conversation to address climate finance.
A
targeted cluster of
grants is awarded through the Foundation's Special Initiative to strengthen core elements of the national legal
aid infrastructure, including innovations for better and more effective service delivery.
Advocating for inclusion of civil legal
aid in federal grant programs that target low - income people, building upon the efforts of the White House Legal Aid Interagency Roundtable and U.S. Department of Justice Office for Access to Justice, and growing the capacity for civil legal services programs to apply for and manage these progr
aid in federal
grant programs that
target low - income people, building upon the efforts of the White House Legal
Aid Interagency Roundtable and U.S. Department of Justice Office for Access to Justice, and growing the capacity for civil legal services programs to apply for and manage these progr
Aid Interagency Roundtable and U.S. Department of Justice Office for Access to Justice, and growing the capacity for civil legal services programs to apply for and manage these programs