Dear John, On Monday, Liz Truss announced the new international development strategy. As the Shadow Cabinet Minister for International Development, it was good to finally have a copy of the much-delayed strategy. However, I was extremely disappointed with its policy and content to say the least. In an article in the Times, a few weeks ago I set out the five tests the strategy must meet to help Britain solve global
crises and champion the international order, rather than retreat further inwards. Sadly, it fails all five. ‘Aid for trade' simply doesn't work. British people want the aid budget to help those most in need around the world, not horse-traded for favours to big British corporations. The Government appears to want to take us back to the 1980s and corruption scandals like the Pergau Dam. It's not just bad for those facing famine and conflict - it's short-sighted and wrong. This strategy also dramatically weakens and will cut funds to the United Nations and our multilateral system. In the middle of climate change and war in Ukraine, Britain must not turn its back on the world's poorest. The
truth is that the Government aren't taking back control. Where once we led, this strategy risks relegating Britain to a secondary role in the international order. If this government was serious about helping the world's poorest, it would start by returning to 0.7% immediately, not in the distant future. Without money behind it, this strategy is barely worth the paper it is written on. |