https://www.providentliving.org/welfare/pdf/WelfareFactSheet.pdf
1985 - 2009 (so 25 years):
Humanitarian Aid in Cash: $327.6 Million
Humanitarian Aid in Material Assistance: $884.6 Million
Total: $1.13 Billion in 25 years.
Roughly $45.2 Million/year, but I bet it has increased as the years have gone on to account for inflation.
Canadian tithing funds given to BYU in 2010: 102 Million
https://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/ebci/haip...k%3Dlatter-day%26amp%3Bb%3Dtrue%26amp%3Bp%3D2
UK tithing funds (where it's a "hard" mission and not growing):
https://www.charity-commission.gov....steredCharityNumber=274605&SubsidiaryNumber=0
City Creek Spending from 2003 - 2012: $1.5 Billion.
It's about priorities. Find an old financial ward clerk in your ward and strike up a conversation and ask roughly how much in tithing your ward brings in. If you are in the US then I bet it's over half a million a year easy. In my local congregation (ward) a few years ago we had a fundraiser to raise funds to buy hymn books, paper, and pencils for other congregations in Africa. The African wards did not get enough supplies from church headquarters. Turning around and sending a few million out in humanitarian relief is hardly noteworthy.
Before you go mentioning all the other good the church does, I agree! However, remember, the canneries and storehouses rely on free labor or labor in exchange for food vouchers, mixed with old couples on missions who are paying their own way, and people from local wards guilted into attending. Not to mention you then have to turn around and buy the food that you just canned (at a great price, yes, but you are still having to pay for it after you put a few hours of labor in).
The church did disclose its funds and how they handled money up until the 1960s when they made a bunch of financial mistakes and built too many buildings, etc. Joseph Smith pretty much bankrupted it himself too. Being god's "one true [] church" does not inoculate it from stupid financial decisions. There's a reason nobody is building billion dollar malls right now besides us and someone in New Jersey.
I hope some of the super faithful don't take this as some anti-rant, but in my experience, if something comes off critical of the church then it's immediately labeled "anti" or "persecution." I don't mean it to come across that way, merely to offer a perspective that our "church" could do more.