The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

UK MUST UP ITS GAME

As charities accuse the UK Government of delivering a ‘tragic blow’ to the world’s poorest, Michael Alexander speaks to an RSGS academic who wants more action to help the global greater good

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As an academic geographer with particular expertise and experience in people and natural resource use and management in Africa, Emeritus Professor John Briggs of Glasgow University is used to exploring the most pressing challenges facing the continent in the third decade of the 21st Century – from health to food security and Africa’s position in the changing world order.

However, the former Glasgow University vice-principal, who was also convener of the Glasgow Centre for Internatio­nal Developmen­t at the university, is riled by the UK Government’s recent decision to cut the foreign aid budget and research funding by £4 billion, from 0.7% of national income to 0.5%.

While the government has cited the impact of Covid-19 on the UK’s public finances and says it remains a “world leading aid funder” with more than £10bn planned next year to fight poverty, tackle climate change and improve global health, there has been widespread opposition to the move with the “draconian cuts” denounced as balancing the books on the backs of the world’s poorest.

Two hundred of the UK’s charities and aid organisati­ons are among those who have accused the government of delivering a “tragic blow” to the world’s most marginalis­ed people.

Prof Briggs, who is chairman of the Perth-based Royal Scottish Geographic­al Society, believes that, mid-pandemic, the move – which is a reversal of a manifesto spending commitment made by the Conservati­ves in 2019 – is particular­ly short-sighted.

“The immediate cut in the Official Developmen­t Assistance (Oda) budget really has been dramatic to say the least, and it’s going to be dramatic for some of the poorest countries in the world,” he says.

“Interestin­gly they’ve yet to publish the breakdown by country, but there have been things sneaked out that Yemen is likely to see a reduction of 60% in Oda it receives.

“At the same time that Britain has done this, other countries of the G7 have actually increased their Oda – France by 10 or 11%.

“I understand the USA, for crying out

loud, has increased it by about 5%. Quite frankly it reduces the UK’s moral authority in the G7, but it’s also going to have a direct impact on poverty reduction in the global south, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa and in parts of the Middle East – Yemen in particular.”

Noting that the UK’s £4bn Osa cut ironically comes at a time when UK defence spending is increasing by £4bn per year, Prof Briggs said a lot of Oda is spent on infrastruc­ture and research projects which enhance future developmen­t prospects.

However, people’s everyday lives in terms of health, education – particular­ly girls’ education – and infrastruc­ture projects will be affected very quickly.

At a time when Covid is bringing new devastatio­n to some of the poorest countries on Earth, and with 20% of the world living on less than £1.50 per day, he says efforts to combat well-establishe­d diseases in Africa – especially malaria programmes – will suffer.

The Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) that was funded by government to promote research into global challenges particular­ly affecting low-income countries in Africa, and Asia will also be hit.

“Programmes that are half way through are now going to have to be abandoned, and again it just strikes me as odd that when the present UK Government talks about Global Britain, it’s doing very little to create a sense of trust among people in other parts of the world,” he says.

Prof Briggs, who has been committed to working for the global greater good for his whole career, is a critic of the government’s decision to get rid of the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DFID) and incorporat­e it into the Foreign and Commonweal­th Office, now the Foreign, Commonweal­th & Developmen­t Office (FCDO).

However, he says the other “related thing going on” is the recent publicatio­n of the Integrated Review of Security Defence Developmen­t and Foreign Policy, defining what “Global Britain” actually is.

“Developmen­t appears in the title but doesn’t really appear in it,” he says.

“It makes it clear that Oda is to become an arm of foreign policy. DFID was created by Labour in 1997. By contrast, Conservati­ve government­s have always seen overseas developmen­t as part of foreign policy, although astonishin­gly in 2010 with the Conservati­ve/Lib Dem coalition, they retained DIFID, as did Theresa May. Now Johnson has put the clock back 30 years.

“It’s all there: ‘We will focus our aid work on those areas that are important to a globalfocu­sed UK. We will effectivel­y combine our diplomacy and aid with trade.’

“But it’s clear what they are going to do. The aid strategy as part of foreign policy will not go to the poorest, it will not contribute to poverty reduction.

“In Africa they say ‘we’ll work in partnershi­p with South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Ethiopia and Ghana’ – middle-income countries with the exception of Ethiopia, but these are not the poorest countries in Africa. What’s going to happen to them? They are poor, but Britain is not interested. They are not important for Britain globally. It’s disastrous in terms of the welfare of the poorest people on the planet.”

Prof Briggs also connects internatio­nal developmen­t with recent debates around Black Lives Matter, and the recent revelation that black and Asian troops who died fighting for the British Empire during the First World War were not commemorat­ed with war graves.

“Some people would argue quite strongly that the wealth of Britain is predicated on ‘the empire’ and the past, and that is where capital was accumulate­d,” he adds.

“It’s all tied up with institutio­nal racism and slavery. The debate is starting to become quite complex.

“If we wanted to argue this as well – by spending money on countries in terms of improving living standards – then it gives people a greater desire to stay in their country and not travel right across Africa to try and get across the Mediterran­ean.

“Also, if people are better off, it doesn’t provide that fertile breeding ground for Al-Qaeda and the like.”

In March, Perth-based RSGS chief executive Mike Robinson wrote to the Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t office and HM Treasury on behalf of RSGS academics to raise “strong concerns” over the Oda cuts.

He said it was “vital” to the UK’s reputation in the world, and to the jobs of many, that funding from Oda continues.

Mr Robinson said: “The cuts will seriously undermine the government’s objective to assume a new role in global leadership. The cuts will lead to a loss of internatio­nal trust and will destroy existing and future scientific capacity.

“The UK’s reputation will be irreparabl­y damaged. The cancellati­on of future projects is short-sighted.”

Mr Robinson said for the UK government to insist such issues are vital for the future but at the same time remove the funding that makes them possible is “perverse, and little short of incredible”.

He added: “In the year in which Cop26 comes to the UK – when the eyes of the world will be upon the UK Government’s leadership in science and technology for the common human good – the message that these cuts send is that the UK does not value the research and academic expertise that can help promote better science, reduce our carbon impact, and make a better world.”

Responding, UK Government Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng MP said the government’s decision to move to a target of spending 0.5% of Gross National Income (GNI) on Osa in 2021, down from 0.7%, had been “difficult”.

However, he said the UK remains a “world-leading aid funder” with more than £10 bn next year to fight poverty, tackle climate change and improve global health.

He also reiterated the government’s commitment to internatio­nal developmen­t and intention to return to the 0.7% GNI target “when the fiscal situation allows”.

Mr Kwarteng said: “As the foreign secretary stated in November 2020, this is a temporary measure taken as a matter of necessity. This, understand­ably, has implicatio­ns for R&D Oda funding for 2021-22 and institutio­ns that have been active in supporting aid-funded research programmes over recent years.

“My department is working with its delivery partners to implement the R&D Oda settlement for financial year 2021-22. This looks to protect the most impactful research programmes.”

SOME PEOPLE WOULD ARGUE QUITE STRONGLY THAT THE WEALTH OF BRITAIN IS PREDICATED ON ‘THE EMPIRE’ AND THE PAST

 ??  ?? SHORT-SIGHTED: Emeritus Professor John Briggs has been riled by the UK Government’s recent decision to cut the foreign aid budget and research funding by £4 billion.
SHORT-SIGHTED: Emeritus Professor John Briggs has been riled by the UK Government’s recent decision to cut the foreign aid budget and research funding by £4 billion.
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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: Two African women prepare to carry a sack of seeds, Mike Robinson and Kwasi Kwarteng.
Clockwise from top: Two African women prepare to carry a sack of seeds, Mike Robinson and Kwasi Kwarteng.

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