The Marshall Islands and Micronesia: Amendments to the Compact of Free Association with the United States

CRS Report for Congress
The Marshall Islands and Micronesia:
Amendments to the Compact of Free Association
with the United States
Updated May 3, 2004
Thomas Lum
Analyst in Asian Affairs
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division


Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

The Marshall Islands and Micronesia: Amendments to
the Compact of Free Association with the United States
Summary
On April 30, 2003 and May 15, 2003, the United States signed agreements with
two Freely Associated States (FAS), the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) and
the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM), to amend provisions of the Compact of
Free Association. The Compact of Free Association, along with the Compact of Free
Association Act of 1985 (P.L. 99-239), has governed the political, economic, and
military relationships between the United States and the FAS since 1986. The
Compact, as amended, provides for continued U.S. financial and program assistance
to the RMI and FSM and payments for U.S. military use of Kwajalein Atoll totaling
approximately $3.5 billion over a twenty-year period. Several changes were made
to the way that grants and programs are administered in order to ensure greater
accountability, oversight, and effectiveness. Furthermore, the Compact, as amended,
establishes trust funds for the purpose of providing revenues to the RMI and FSM
beyond 2023. The agreements were approved by Congress on November 30, 2003,
and signed into law on December 17, 2003 (P.L. 108-188). Related issues include
the RMI petition for additional compensation for past U.S. nuclear testing on the
Marshall Islands (the changed circumstances petition) and the impact of FAS
migration on Guam, Hawaii, and other U.S. jurisdictions.



Contents
Legislative Developments.......................................1
Background ..................................................2
History ..................................................2
Compact Objectives........................................2
Major Provisions..........................................2
Expiring Provisions........................................3
Oversight and Administration....................................3
Joint Economic Management and Financial Accountability
Committee (JEMFAC)..................................4
Grants and Program Oversight................................4
Direct Funding................................................4
Grants ...................................................5
Trust Fund...............................................5
Program Assistance............................................6
Related Issues.................................................6
Kwajalein Missile Base.....................................6
The Changed Circumstances Petition..........................7
Immigration ..............................................8
Compact Impact...........................................8
List of Figures
Figure 1. The Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and the Pacific Islands.........11
List of Tables
Table 1. Marshall Islands and Micronesia: Economic and Compact
Assistance Data..............................................10



The Marshall Islands and Micronesia:
Amendments to the Compact of Free
Association with the United States
In April and May 2003, the United States and two Freely Associated States
(FAS) — the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) and the Federated States of
Micronesia (FSM) — signed, ad referendum,1 agreements to amend the Compact of2
Free Association. The Compact, along with the Compact of Free Association Act
of 1985 (P.L. 99-239), governs the political, economic, and military relationships
between the United States and the FAS. The Compact, as amended, extends
economic assistance worth an estimated $3.5 billion to the RMI and FSM over a 20-
year period beginning in FY2004 (including grants, trust fund contributions, federal
programs, payments for U.S. military use of Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands,3
and inflation adjustments). Several changes were made to the way that grants and
programs are administered in order to ensure greater accountability, oversight, and
effectiveness. The amendments establish trust funds for the purpose of providing
revenues to the RMI and FSM governments beyond 2023.
Legislative Developments
On July 8, 2003, Representative Leach introduced H.J.Res. 63, the Compact of
Free Association Amendments Act of 2003, which was referred to the Committees on
International Relations, Resources, and the Judiciary. On July 14, 2003, Senator
Domenici introduced a companion measure, S.J.Res. 16, and referred it to the
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. On October 28, 2003, the House of
Representatives passed H.J.Res 63. On November 6, 2003, the Senate passed its
version of H.J.Res. 63, which was very similar to the House version. The House
approved the Senate’s amendments on November 20, 2003. President Bush signed
the bill into law on December 17, 2003 (P.L. 108-188). The legislation extends
eligibility for the following programs and services that were due to expire under


1 Subject to congressional approval.
2 In congressional hearings and elsewhere, RMI and FSM leaders indicated several
“outstanding issues” or demands for further consideration, including a fully indexed
inflation adjustment on Compact funding; the continuation of some U.S. federal programs
and services that were due to terminate when the Compact was amended; and higher “use
fees” for U.S. defense operations on Kwajalein Atoll. See Statement of Gerald M. Zackios,
Foreign Minister, Republic of the Marshall Islands before the House International Relations
Committee, Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific, June 18, 2003.
3 See Susan S. Westin, United States General Accounting Office, “Compact of Free
Association: An Assessment of the Amended Compacts and Related Agreements,”
Testimony before the House Committee on Resources, July 10, 2003.

various “sunset” provisions: Pell Grants, programs under the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), Job Corps, and the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA). In lieu of eligibility for other educational programs
that are not to be renewed, such as Head Start and No Child Left Behind, P.L. 108-
188 authorizes supplemental education grants of $6.1 million and $12.2 million for
the RMI and the FSM, respectively, (plus inflation adjustments) for each of fiscal
years 2005-2023.
Background
History. The Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) and the Federated States
of Micronesia (FSM) were districts of the U.S.-administered United Nations Trust
Territory, established in 1947. In 1986, the Marshall Islands and Micronesia each
entered into a Compact of Free Association with the United States and thereby
became sovereign, “freely associated” states (FAS).4 The Compact agreements were
negotiated and agreed to by the governments of the United States, the Marshall
Islands, and Micronesia, and approved by plebiscites in the Trust Territory districts
and by the U.S. Congress in 1985 (P.L. 99-239). Some portions of the Compact
expired after a 15-year term in October 2001. The Compact provided that economic
assistance provisions would be extended for two years (2002-03) if negotiations to
renew them were not concluded by 2001. In addition, P.L. 106-504 (To Amend the
Organic Act of Guam) extended eligibility for U.S. grant assistance, federal
programs, and other services during the period in which the Compact amendments
were negotiated and Congress considered legislation to approve them. Between
November 1999 and November 2002, the Department of State Office of Compact
Negotiations and the governments of the Marshall Islands and Micronesia completed
formal negotiations for renewing portions of the Compact.
Compact Objectives. The Compact of Free Association established the RMI5
and FSM as sovereign states that conduct their own foreign policy. The Compact
was intended to establish democratic self-government for each country, advance
economic development and self-sufficiency through U.S. grants and program
assistance, and ensure or promote the national security of the Freely Associated
States and the United States in light of Cold War geopolitical concerns. Many U.S.
policy makers have agreed that the goals of democratic self-government and mutual
security have largely been achieved. However, economic development and self-
sufficiency have remained elusive.
Major Provisions. Principal terms of the Compact of Free Association and
subsidiary agreements provide:
!The United States shall support the FAS economically with the goal
of making them self-sufficient. FAS citizens residing in their own
countries are eligible for many U.S. federal programs. (Title Two)


4 The Republic of Palau became a Freely Associated State in 1995.
5 The RMI and FSM were admitted to the United Nations in 1991.

!The United States is obligated to defend the FAS against attack or
threat of attack. The United States may block FAS government
policies that it deems inconsistent with its duty to defend the FAS,
the so-called “defense veto.” (Title Three)
!The United States has the prerogative to reject the strategic use of,
or military access to, the FAS by third countries, the so-called “right
of strategic denial.” (Title Three)
!The United States may establish military facilities in the FAS.
Through the Military Use and Operating Rights Agreement
(MUORA) with the RMI, the United States operates military
facilities on Kwajalein Atoll.
!Citizens of the Freely Associated States have the right to reside and
work in the United States and its territories as lawful non-
immigrants or habitual residents and are eligible to volunteer for
service in the U.S. armed forces. (Title One)
Expiring Provisions. Grant assistance (Title Two, Article I of the Compact),
representing about 75% of all economic assistance, the “defense veto,” and the right
to establish additional military bases in the RMI and FSM were limited by the
Compact to a 15-year term subject to negotiation and renewal in 2001 (automatically
extended to 2003). U.S. defense obligations, the “right of strategic denial,” the
agreement to use the Kwajalein Missile Range, and immigration privileges were not
among the expiring provisions. In 2000, the RMI and FSM governments agreed to
extend the security provisions of the Compact — the defense veto and additional
base rights. Most of the bilateral negotiations for renewing portions of the Compact
involved grant assistance and FAS eligibility for U.S. federal programs.
Oversight and Administration
Although Compact assistance as a percentage of government revenue has been
decreasing, particularly in Micronesia, the RMI and FSM remain heavily dependent
upon U.S. grants. In 2000, the General Accounting Office (GAO), in two reports
examining U.S. assistance to the Marshall Islands and Micronesia, found that poor
government and local management in the RMI and FSM and insufficient U.S.6
oversight had contributed to slow economic progress in the two countries. In
response to many of these findings, the Compact, as amended, provides for greater
oversight and control over U.S. assistance to the RMI and FSM. Some experts also
have cited other, inherent obstacles to economic development in the two atoll
nations, including lack of natural resources and arable land, poor business
environments, limited and isolated markets, minimal opportunities for economies of
scale, and inadequate infrastructures.


6 U.S. General Accounting Office, “Better Accountability Needed Over U.S. Assistance to
Micronesia and the Marshall Islands,” May 2000; U.S. General Accounting Office, “U.S.
Funds to Two Micronesian Nations Had Little Impact on Economic Development,”
September 2000.

Joint Economic Management and Financial Accountability
Committee (JEMFAC). In order to provide better oversight of grant assistance,
the Compact, as amended, establishes a Joint Economic Management Committee
(JEMCO) for the RMI and FSM, each composed of a U.S. chair, two other members
of the U.S. government, and two members of the FAS government. The
establishment and operation of JEMCO is to be governed by the Fiscal Procedures
Agreement. The governments of the RMI and FSM are required to report annually
to the President of the United States on the use of grant and other assistance.
JEMCO is to review and comment on the report and make recommendations.
Grants and Program Oversight. In contrast to the previous 15-year
funding arrangement, in which the governments of the Marshall Islands and
Micronesia were given wide discretion over spending,7 U.S. grants under the
amended Compact are targeted narrowly and conditionally. Grant assistance shall
be extended to six sectors — education, health, infrastructure, public sector capacity
building, private sector development, and the environment — with greater priorities
placed on education and health programs. Grantees must provide detailed budgets
and feasible plans before they are approved. Beginning in 2004, all federal agencies
shall be required to report to the Department of the Interior (DOI) regarding their
services in the RMI and FSM in order to avoid the duplication of benefits. In
November 2003, the DOI opened an office in Honolulu, Hawaii, to monitor grant
assistance, trust funds, and federal programs in the FAS and to administer “Compact
impact” funds.8
Direct Funding
Since the Compact of Free Association was enacted in 1985, the United States
has provided economic assistance to the Marshall Islands and Micronesia by way of
mandatory or permanent funding (direct grants) through the Department of the
Interior, discretionary or current federal program assistance through DOI and over 18
other federal agencies,9 and economic assistance to the Marshall Islands for adverse
effects of U.S. nuclear testing during the 1940s and 1950s. The DOI’s Office of
Insular Affairs has been responsible for administering, coordinating, and monitoring10
about 80% of Compact assistance. According to one GAO estimate, between 1987


7 The wide discretion given to the RMI and FSM by the United States was in part a gesture
recognizing the sovereignty of the new Freely Associated States.
8 “U.S. to Monitor Compact Compliance from Honolulu,” Pacific Islands Report, November
6, 2003. For a summary of the accountability provisions of the compact, as Compact, as
amended, see Testimony of David Cohen, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Insular Affairs,
U.S. Department of the Interior before the House International Relations Committee,
Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific, June 18, 2003.
9 Compact funding is not provided under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961. RMI and
FSM citizens are named beneficiaries to federal programs.
10 The Department of State is responsible for government-to-government relations and
Compact renewal negotiations. The Department of State also chairs the Interagency Group
on Freely Associated States’ Affairs, which provides policy guidance on matters related to
the FAS.

and 2001, U.S. direct payments to the RMI and FSM, excluding nuclear fallout-
related assistance, totaled approximately $2 billion, making the two Freely
Associated States among the largest recipients of U.S. assistance worldwide (See
Table 1). Federal program assistance extended to the two countries was worth an11
additional $700 million.
Grants. The Compact, as amended, provides to the Marshall Islands $629
million in sector grants over 20 years (excluding Kwajalein payments and inflation
adjustments). In addition, the agreement extends to the RMI $7 million in trust fund
contributions in 2004, increasing by $500,000 annually to $16.5 million in 2023 (for
a total of $235 million). The Compact amendments provide $1.4 billion in sector
grants to Micronesia over the same period (excluding inflation adjustments). In
addition, the agreement extends to the FSM $16 million in trust fund contributions
in 2004, rising incrementally to $29.6 million in 2023 (for a total of $442 million).
For the RMI, yearly grant assistance for 2004-23 would average about $31.5 million,
compared to an average $32.5 million per year in 1987-2001 (excluding inflation
adjustments and nuclear fallout payments12). For the FSM, annual grant assistance
for 2004-2023 would average about $70 million, compared to an average $67.5
million per year in 1987-2001 (excluding inflation adjustments).13 The real value of
grants per capita, however, are projected to decline for the RMI and FSM over the
20-year period. The Compact amendments as negotiated by the Bush Administration
stipulate that annual grants and trust fund contributions shall be adjusted annually by
66% of the inflation rate or 5%, whichever is less in any one year, using 2004 as a
base. The RMI and FSM had requested a fully indexed inflation rate (100% of the
rate of inflation).
Trust Fund. The Compact, as amended, establishes trust funds for the RMI
and FSM, the corpuses of which shall be built up over 20 years through annual
contributions by the United States, the Marshall Islands and Micronesia, and other
donors. The trust funds are intended to provide government revenue for the RMI and
FSM once U.S. grant assistance ends in 2023. Initial contributions shall be made by
the Marshall Islands and Micronesia, using funds from the windfall in U.S. grant
assistance in 2002-03.14


11 For information on Compact funding levels and the effectiveness of federal programs in
the RMI and FSM, see U.S. General Accounting Office, “Effectiveness and Accountability
Problems Common in U.S. Programs to Assist Two Micronesian Nations,” January 2002.
See also CRS Report RL30749, The Marshall Islands and Micronesia: Negotiations with
the United States for Renewing Provisions of the Compact of Free Association, by Thomas
Lum.
12 Nuclear Claims compensation (Section 177 of the Compact), Bikini Resettlement,
Rongelap Resettlement, Enewetak Operations, and other payments.
13 Data from the U.S. Department of the Interior.
14 Although grant assistance expired in 2001, funding continued under an automatic
extension, at a rate equal to the average annual direct assistance during the first Compact
term (1986-2001). Since Compact aid was extended in decreasing increments during the
first term, the grant assistance for 2002-03 represented an increase or “bump up” over the
immediately preceding years. This additional income was expected to be used for the new
(continued...)

Program Assistance
To the extent that they remain available to state and local governments in the
United States and to the extent that FAS citizens remain eligible through
congressional authorizations, the vast majority of U.S. federal programs available to
the RMI and FSM are expected to continue under the Compact, as amended.
However, some program authorization and appropriations measures have terminated
eligibility to FAS citizens. The statuses of the major categories of program
assistance are as follows:
!Title Two, Article II, Section 221 of the Compact, as amended,
extends the services and programs of the U.S. Weather Service, U.S.
Postal Service, Federal Aviation Administration, U.S. Department
of Transportation, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC) for the FSM, with little change from the original Compact,
pursuant to the Federal Programs and Services Agreement. The
Compact amendments as negotiated by the Bush Administration
terminated eligibility for disaster and rehabilitation services of the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). However, P.L.

108-188 continues FEMA services for the RMI and FSM.


!Title Two, Article II, Section 222 of the Compact, as amended,
continues FAS eligibility for additional federal services and
programs pursuant to the Federal Programs and Services
Agreement. Congress has the prerogative to authorize or re-
authorize specific programs under this provision. P.L. 108-188
continues eligibility for several programs that were due to expire
under various “sunset” provisions, including Pell Grants, the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), and Job Corps.
In lieu of other programs that are not to be renewed, such as Head
Start and No Child Left Behind, P.L. 108-188 authorizes
supplemental education grants. The Compact Amendments Act also
authorizes continued USDA food donations for nuclear-affected
areas (RMI).
!Special programs provided under Title Two, Article I, Sections 212,
214, 215, and 216 of the original Compact for Civic Action Teams
(FSM), energy self-sufficiency, communications infrastructure,
medical programs, and post-secondary education scholarships are
not provided by the amended Compact.
Related Issues
Kwajalein Missile Base. The Marshall Islands government and Kwajalein
landowners are bound by the Land Use Agreement (LUA), through which the RMI
government pays the landowners for relinquishing their property. The United States


14 (...continued)
trust funds.

regularly conducts missile defense tests and space surveillance activities from
Kwajalein (Ronald Reagan Ballistic Missile Defense Test Site or RTS). RTS is
currently the only site where the United States launches interceptors against
long-range missiles. Some experts consider Kwajalein to be of critical importance
to the Bush Administration’s missile defense strategy.15 In September 1999, the
United States exercised its right to extend the Military Use and Operating Rights
Agreement (MUORA) for Kwajalein Atoll from 2001 to 2016. Under the Compact,
as amended, U.S. base rights are to continue to 2066, with the U.S. option to extend
the arrangement for another 20 years (to 2086). The United States can terminate its
use of the site after 2023, although if it withdraws before 2053, penalty fees would
apply.
Marshall Islands leaders and Kwajalein landowners have expressed misgivings
about the timetable and use fees. The RMI government favors a U.S. commitment
of longer than 20 years (beyond 2023). The Compact, as amended, raises annual
payments from $13 million to $15 million and then to $18 million in 2014, plus
“Kwajalein impact” payments and adjustments for inflation. However, Kwajalein
landowners reportedly have demanded higher use fees and argued that the U.S.-RMI
agreements related to Kwajalein land use are not enforceable without their approval.16
The Changed Circumstances Petition. The Compact of Free Association
set up a Nuclear Claims Tribunal and established a Nuclear Claims Fund of $150
million, the proceeds of which were to provide compensation for personal and
property damages resulting from U.S. nuclear testing and fallout on Bikini and other
atolls during the 1940s and 1950s. The Fund’s investment returns were projected to
generate $18 million annually for a total of $270 million after 15 years. However,
by 2000, the corpus of the Fund had been nearly exhausted, and the Tribunal could
not fully pay the awards that it had granted.
Although the Fund was intended to espouse or fully settle all nuclear claims
against the U.S. government, the Compact entitles the RMI government to submit to
the U.S. Congress a request for additional compensation, if loss or damage to persons
and property arises or is discovered which could not reasonably have been identified
as of the effective date of the agreement (1986) and if such injuries render the
provisions of the Compact “manifestly inadequate” (the changed circumstances
clause). In September 2000, the Marshall Islands submitted to the Senate Energy
and Natural Resources Committee a nuclear claims petition worth up to $2 billion for
medical care, radiological monitoring, personal injury, and property damages as


15 U.S. General Accounting Office, “Kwajalein Atoll is the Key U.S. Defense Interest in
Two Micronesian Nations,” January 2002.
16 In addition, The Kwajalein Negotiation Commission (KNC) representing Kwajalein
landowners proposed that a trust fund be set up to provide annual income to landowners if
and when the United States withdraws from Kwajalein. According to this proposal, the trust
fund would be capitalized with contributions from the United States, Kwajalein landowners,
and the RMI government. See Statement of Senator Christopher J. Loeak (RMI), before the
House International Relations Committee, Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific, June 18,
2003. See also “Marshalls: $2 Billion Kwajalein Lease Not Enough,” Pacific Islands
Report Briefs, January 24, 2003.

allowed under the changed circumstances clause. In March 2002, the Senate Energy
and Natural Resources Committee and House Resources Committee requested that
an interagency group (U.S. Departments of State, Energy, and Defense) evaluate the
petition and provide Congress with an assessment of the legal merits of the petition.
No date has been set for the completion of this assessment.
Immigration. Citizens of the FSM and RMI possess unrestricted access to the
United States to study, work, and reside as “habitual residents.” An estimated 11,500
FAS citizens have migrated to the United States and its territories since the Compact
was enacted. Proof of citizenship, but no visa, is required for entry into the United
States. Only FAS citizens seeking U.S. citizenship need a U.S. immigrant visa to
acquire permanent residency status. The Compact exempts citizens of the Freely
Associated States from normal documentation requirements — including those
related to health, criminal background, and the likelihood of becoming a public
charge — that can be used as grounds for inadmissibility under the Immigration and
Nationality Act for most other non-U.S. citizens seeking to travel to the United
States.
During the period in which the Compact amendments were under negotiation,
some community leaders and Members of Congress from areas impacted by FAS
migration expressed concern about the lack of screening of FAS entrants, particularly
those who may have arrived with communicable diseases, criminal records, or lack
of education or employable skills. In addition, some Bush Administration officials
voiced alarm about the possibility of international terrorists entering the United
States via the FAS. The amended Compact preserves the basic terms of the
immigration laws pertaining to the FAS, and adds minor changes. The new
immigration provisions include FAS citizens are required to present a passport before
being allowed to enter the United States; naturalized citizens of the FAS must
demonstrate five years of actual residence in the FAS in order to gain the status of
habitual resident in the United States; yearly Employment Authorization Documents
are no longer required; adopted children shall apply for admission to the United
States under the general immigration requirements for adopted children.
Compact Impact. Section 104(e) of the Compact Act of 1985 (P.L. 99-239)
requires the President to report annually to Congress on the impact of the Compact
on U.S. territories and commonwealths in the Pacific and on the State of Hawaii, and
to cover the costs “resulting from any increased demands placed upon education and
social services” by migrants from the Marshall Islands and the Federated States of
Micronesia. Guam and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI)
received $41 million and $3.8 million, respectively, in Compact impact assistance
during 1986-2001. For FY2002, Guam was appropriated $6.38 million in Compact
impact assistance, the CNMI $2 million, and Hawaii $4 million.17 Guam and the
CNMI estimated the costs of FAS migration (spending on education, health care,
public safety, and housing) at $180 million and $105-$133 million, respectively, in

1986-2000, though FAS migration to the CNMI has been decreasing. Hawaii


17 Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2002 (P.L. 107-63).

assessed $86 million in Compact impact costs through 2000, though much of the

1986-95 period reportedly was not accounted for.18


In June 2003, the Bush Administration pledged $15 million per year in
mandatory funding from the Department of the Interior to be divided among Guam,
the CNMI, and Hawaii for 20 years beginning in FY2004. Some leaders of the
impacted areas argued that $15 million did not meet costs and should be viewed only
as a minimum or baseline.19 On June 19, 2003, Congresswoman Bordallo introduced
H.R. 2522, the Compact Impact Reconciliation Act, which would amend the Organic
Act of Guam20 to authorize the Secretary of the Interior to reduce, release, or waive
amounts owed by the government of Guam to the United States to offset
unreimbursed Compact impact expenses. On July 14, 2003, Congresswoman
Bordallo introduced H.R. 2716, the Compact-Impact Reimbursement Act, which
would amend the Compact Act of 1985 (P.L. 99-239) by authorizing $35 million per
year from 2004 through 2023 to impacted U.S. jurisdictions, extending health care
reimbursements, and ensuring eligibility to FAS migrants for food stamps and other
federal services. The Compact of Free Association Amendments Act, 2003 (P.L. 108-
188) provides for $30 million per year in mandatory Compact-impact funding. The
act also authorizes the President to reduce, release, or waive all or part of any
amounts owed by the Government of Guam or the Government of the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands to the government of the United
S t at es. 21


18 See U.S. General Accounting Office, “Migration from Micronesian Nations Has Had
Significant Impact on Guam, Hawaii, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands,” October 2001.
19 Scott Whitney, “Negotiating Compact Impact,” Pacific Magazine, June 2003.
20 48 U.S.C. 1421 et seq.
21 “$157 M Debt Write-off Ok’d,” Pacific Daily News, December 19, 2003.

Table 1. Marshall Islands and Micronesia: Economic and
Compact Assistance Data
RMIFSM
Area (land and sea)750,000 sq. miles1 million sq. miles
Population (2002 est.)52,000109,000
Per capita income,$1,600$2,000
purchasing power parity
(PPP) terms (2001, CIA)
Average yearly mandatorya b c1987-1991: $89.1 mil.1987-1991: $98.1 mil.
(grant) assistance 1992-1996: $53.9 mil.1992-1996: $91.6 mil.
(DOI) 1997-2001: $46.0 mil.1997-2001: $80.2 mil.
Est. mandatory (grant)a b c $945 million$1.345 billion
assistance, 1987-2001
(DOI)
Est. mandatory (grant)a c$97.1 million$196 million
assistance, 2002-2003
(DOI)
Projected mandatory$734 million$1.721 billion
(grant) assistance, 2004-a c

2023 (DOI)


Projected U.S. trust fund$276 million$517 million
contributions, 2004-2023
(GAO)
U.S. economic assistance$1,085$895
per capita, 1998 (GAO)
Other major foreign aidJapan, ADB, Australia,Japan, ADB, Australia,
donors Taiwan
Note: ADB = Asian Development Bank; CIA = Central Intelligence Agency; DOI = Department of
the Interior; GAO = General Accounting Office.
a. U.S. direct grants, including inflationary adjustments
b. Totals for the RMI include nuclear damages compensation
c. Includes funds for Kwajalein impact and development (Marshall Islands).



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Figure 1. The Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and the Pacific Islands


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