The Government has said that aid cuts are “necessary” to meet new
defence spending targets, as it refuses to make spending
commitments on nutrition.
Responding to a report
by the cross-party International Development Committee, the
Government rejected the Committee's recommendation to reconsider
its cuts to the UK's aid spending. Its decision to reduce the aid
budget was a “necessary” one in order to increase defence
spending to 2.5% of gross national income by 2027, it said,
adding that protecting national security was “the first duty of
any government.”
The Government also said the ongoing Spending Review process
meant it was unable to make a funding commitment at the Nutrition
for Growth Summit or to make a future pledge to the Child
Nutrition Fund.
In its report, the Committee had called for the Government to
“lead by example” in pushing forward attempts to eliminate global
hunger, by ensuring that all aid spending committed to nutrition
and food security was predictable, long term and safeguarded from
changes to funding.
The report focused on the Government's efforts to achieve
Sustainable Development Goal 2: a target set ten years ago to end
hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition, and promote
sustainable agriculture by 2030. Progress towards this goal is
faltering; last year the UN's World Food Programme found that 733
million people faced hunger in 2024, while 45 million children
under 5 suffer from acute malnutrition.
The Committee's report urged the Government to learn lessons from
previous cuts calling for a “phased transition” with clear
communication, warning that a repeat of the way in which cuts
were handled in 2020 could mean “the damage to the UK's
reputation will be all but impossible to reverse.”
In response, the Government said it had learned lessons from
previous reductions, including by gradually reducing aid to 0.3%
and by carefully considering the strategic shifts that will be
required to deliver reductions over the course of the Spending
Review.
The Committee's report and the Government's response are
available to read on the Committee's
website.
MP, Chair of the
International Development Committee, said:
“The Government's response sets out some positive steps and a
desire to do the right thing, which makes it odd that they've not
agreed to more of our recommendations.
While it is understandable that Ministers might not want to make
promises they cannot keep, one can only surmise that important
decisions on aid and development are being held hostage by the
spending review process.
There are hints in this response of the ‘significant shifts'
required to deliver sharp aid cuts. But what will these shifts
actually involve? The Committee heard no further detail during
our recent evidence session with the Development Minister.”