Minister for Development, , gave a speech on the UK's
new approach to development at the G20 Development Ministerial
Meeting in South Africa.
"Congratulations to the Presidency on hosting the first G20 in
Africa.
It has taken 20 years to meet in Africa. There is no world in
which this should have taken so long. From the UK's perspective,
we should not wait another 20 years to do this again.
This is at the core of what I want to use my intervention to say.
That we in the UK believe we have to do development differently
now.
We cannot start from the idea that ‘we know best'. We must not
just pay lip service to what our partners tell us. When we say
partnership and not paternalism – we have to mean it.
The solutions of 2005 are not the solutions of 2025. And with
environmental shocks, health crises, and more conflicts than at
any time since the middle of the last century, all hitting the
poorest hardest, we have to face up to reality.
This is the only way to rise to the global challenge that Mandela
gave us – to Make Poverty History.
There are three specific ways in which we are transforming the
UK's approach.
One – we are listening. Our new approach is already informing our
new strategy. But there is a long way to go.
New leadership from across the globe is changing what is
possible, again. Powerful voices like President of the African
Development Bank, Akinwumi Adesina. The new Commonwealth
Secretary General, Shirley Botchwey. Nigerian Health Minister,
Muhammad Ali Pate.
These are just a few of the 47 African governments and
multilateral bodies, and over 200 businesses and communities that
the UK has consulted – following our Foreign Secretary's visit to
Cape Town last year.
Two – we are thinking like investors, not donors, and bringing
all the UK's strengths to the table.
In partnership, we can share everything from world-class health
and tech know-how, to new ways of getting finance flowing into
emerging and developing markets – from the world's green finance
hub in London.
I saw some of this yesterday at an agri-business in this region,
with British International Investment helping to create 400 local
jobs. Critical for the economy and for supporting South Africa's
Just Energy Transition Partnership.
We're making headway on getting money in place before disasters
hit, and unlocking private capital – as we discussed together in
Seville, at FFD4 two weeks ago.
The private sector is vital – which is why we matched private
funding for Gavi, so we can get new ideas and fresh thinking into
how we keep our populations healthy.
And third – this is all part of our shared mission for economic
growth and opportunity. That is how we get countries on a journey
out of development and aid – and help millions more people out of
poverty.
So, I want to thank the Presidency for choosing themes that go to
the heart of how we can work together.
On illicit finance – my friend the Foreign Secretary is leading
the UK's efforts to tackle this shared challenge, and he will
host a global conference.
There is more though for us all to do – to give people confidence
that they can trust governments to use their money well, and
combat criminals laundering money through the world's financial
centres.
And on social protection – together, we are developing systems
every government needs, to reach the most vulnerable people
facing hunger and poverty.
That includes the work my colleague Lord Collins is co-leading,
alongside Somalia's Deputy Prime Minister – to make sure this can
be felt in the most fragile places on earth.
Finally, these auspicious occasions, as I am sure you all know,
can happen with such frequency that we show up and we repeat
positions we have been stuck on for years. But instead, I want to
use every occasion we come together as an opportunity to leave
‘business as usual' behind – and push for the change we all know
is needed.
So we are going to work together, harder – to secure reform at
the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund, and the
World Bank.
To improve and expand the G20's approach to debt, ahead of the
leaders summit.
To back Brazil's work to make the next climate summit count.
And to champion ambition and innovation at the African
Development Bank – as well as the replenishment of the Global
Fund, that we are proud to co-host alongside South Africa.
This is how we remake development for the next 20 years. Making
sure we don't wait decades to meet in Africa again.
Starting with the idea that we need to learn from one another –
and drop the old idea that ‘we know best'.
And facing up to reality. So we listen to our partners. Think
like investors. And bringing all our strengths to bear, in
pursuit of the economic growth and opportunity that we need – to
help millions more people put poverty behind them.
Thank you."