- International Development Minister
will set out his vision
to reduce poverty, tackle climate change and reinvigorate
progress towards the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
- The Minister will launch a new UK
development brand that badges the FCDO’s work to use partnerships
to advance development progress and deliver prosperity.
- Foreign, Commonwealth and
Development Office will also announce plans for a new
international volunteering service, and a programme to get six
million more girls into schools around the world.
The UK will today set out a new vision to improve global
prosperity and reduce poverty through building partnerships with
other countries.
In his first major speech, International Development Minister
will say the future of
development relies on us working alongside countries as partners,
rather than them being dependent on aid budgets.
Using the entire Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office
global footprint, the UK will work with other countries to
advance shared aims that benefit us all, like security and
economic growth, recognising the need to tackle poverty and
climate change together. The Minister will also say the
international financial system needs to be fundamentally
reformed, so countries can access the finance at the scale they
need to drive their own development and tackle climate change in
the face of global challenges.
He will announce a new brand, UK International Development, to
demonstrate UK development is broader than aid, and is ultimately
about working with countries by building mutually beneficial
partnerships.
He is expected to say:
“Placing partnership at the heart of the UK’s offer shows that at
its core, international development is not about charity,
handouts and dependency. It is about listening to our partners
and working together to advance our shared objectives.”
From today, the new brand will be on all new UK development
programmes.
The Minister will set out how, using the UK’s strengths, he will
champion and take forward the seven priorities the Prime Minister
set out in the Integrated Review refresh last month: reforming
the global financial system, making global tax systems fairer,
delivering clean, green infrastructure and investment, improving
global food security, making the case for “open science”,
preventing the next global health crisis and putting women and
girls at the heart of all
development.
Building on the Prime Minister’s Integrated Review refresh last
month, the Minister will say he is making sure women and girls
are at the forefront of all policy decisions.
He will announce a new programme designed to get six million more
girls into school each year by improving education spending in
low and lower middle-income countries and scaling up teacher
training and in-class support so there is better access for
vulnerable children.
In a bid to link the British public to the UK’s development work,
the Minister will also announce that later this year the Foreign,
Commonwealth and Development Office will go out to tender on a
new international youth volunteering programme, similar to the
former International Citizen Service.
The Minister will also make clear Britain is firmly behind the
ambition set out by the Prime Minister of Barbados, Mia Mottley,
last year to enable countries around the world to tackle climate
change and the reversal of development progress over recent
years.
The UK is pushing for concrete progress on multilateral
development bank (MDB) reform, drawing on a UK initiated review,
to unlock hundreds of billions in financing for developing
countries and help bridge the global climate and nature finance
gaps. Britain is providing technical expertise so countries can
unlock funding from global climate funds. The UK government,
together with the City of London, is driving innovations in
insurance, paying out the first drought insurance support for
Somalia. We are ensuring part of our humanitarian relief is
used in ways that builds future resilience to climate impacts.
Since taking up the International Development Minister role six
months ago Minister Mitchell has driven work to tackle hunger and
malnutrition in some of the poorest countries. During a visit to
Somalia last year, he saw first-hand how children were suffering
with severe malnutrition and the impact drought had on the
country.
In his speech he is expected to say: “It is frankly obscene, that
in the 21st century and in our world of plenty, children are
today slowly starving to death.”
To bring this to the top of the development agenda the Minister
will announce a food security event in London later this year to
demonstrate the breadth of the UK’s work to tackle hunger and
malnutrition, bringing together the expertise and skills of the
academic, medical, research, philanthropic and the NGO community.
Notes to editors:
The speech will be at Chatham House from 9am on Thursday
27th April and can be viewed here: Can rhetoric match
reality? Britain’s international development future
(chathamhouse.org)