Policy Exchange: It’s not just the size of your aid budget but what you do with it that counts
· The UK should
maintain its commitment to spend 0.7% of national income on
overseas aid, as part of a wider approach to create a truly Global
Britain · In order
to maximise the impact of our overseas aid, the Government should
spend more on global public goods like R&D and create a new
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Policy Exchange today publishes ‘Global Britain, Global Challenges: How to make aid more effective’. The report makes a strong case for the importance of overseas aid and supports the Government’s commitment to spending 0.7 per cent of national income on aid. However, it also argues strongly that aid can and should be spent more effectively and that the development community should embrace trade and capitalism as vital to reducing poverty and disease.
The report has a forward by Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson, in which she says:
Policy Exchange’s Programme Director Richard Howard said:
“While we support the Government’s commitment to maintaining spending on overseas aid, the Government should be mindful that it’s not just the size of your aid budget but what you do with it that counts.
“There are clear synergies between Britain’s national interest and the wider global interest in tackling global challenges, supporting hard and soft power, accelerating innovation and encouraging free trade. In recent years, too many international NGOs have become involved with domestic politics or pushed misleading narratives about global inequality. Elements of the NGO community still fail to recognise that capitalism and free trade are part of the answer, not part of the problem. Free trade is vital to alleviating global poverty.
“Compared to other countries, the British aid budget is reasonably well targeted on countries with high levels of poverty or disease. However, there is still more we can do to identify the most important global challenges or cost-effective interventions. British aid should focus more on global public goods such as liberalising trade or investing in R&D.”
The report proposes four principles to ensure that resources are spent most effectively and go still further to help Britain take a leading role in tackling the world's most important challenges:
1) Maintain the commitment to a Global Britain
2) Create a more efficient and innovative aid budget
3) Stand up for democracy, the rule of law and a free press
4) Reduce trade barriers with the developing world and act as a global champion of free trade
This report will be followed up by a second part, to be published in the autumn, which will explore how British R&D can help tackle global challenges, and which interventions are the most crucial.
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