Otago Daily Times

Where NZ should focus its strengths

NZ has never come close to meeting its UN foreign aid targets, but with the country facing so many pressing issues on the home front this election year, Prof Stephen Knowles and Prof John Crump look at whether we should care.

-

WHEN disaster strikes overseas, the New Zealand government is typically quick to announce the provision of emergency humanitari­an aid.

For example, when an earthquake killed tens of thousands in Turkey and Syria in February, we promptly announced assistance of $1.5 million. This might suggest that New Zealand is quite generous when it comes to foreign aid, but is this true?

The provision of emergency humanitari­an aid, like that donated following the earthquake in Turkey and Syria, happens in parallel with much less visible New Zealand government contributi­ons to global economic developmen­t (e.g. money to build schools, hospitals, factories or roads). Collective­ly, all types of government aid transferre­d to developing countries is known as official developmen­t assistance (ODA).

A United Nations resolution in 1970 called for advanced economies to contribute 0.7% of their gross national income to ODA. Each advanced economy was to exert its best efforts to reach the target by the middle of the 1970s. This goal has been reaffirmed many times over the years at various United Nations conference­s.

New Zealand has never come close to meeting the United Nations target for ODA, irrespecti­ve of what political party holds power — our contributi­on has consistent­ly been below 0.3%.

According to recently released Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) data, New Zealand’s contributi­on in 2022 was 0.23%, the seventhlow­est in the OECD.

True, New Zealand is not the only country to fall well short of the target, and is actually closer to meeting the target than either Australia or the United States. However, there are countries like Sweden, Norway, and Denmark that do consistent­ly meet the target.

In 2015, the United Kingdom passed a law requiring the target be met, although in response to the Covid19 pandemic the UK government announced that the target would temporaril­y fall to 0.5% as a shortterm measure. Among the countries that fail to reach the target, many come closer to meeting it than New Zealand.

This begs the question, what is the point of ODA anyway, especially when New Zealand faces so many pressing problems at home? Contributi­ons from wealthier countries in support of those with more limited resources are central to solving some of the biggest problems that face humans as a species. These problems, and the targets for solving them, are expressed as the 2015 United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t

Goals, or SDGs.

The SDGs seek to crystallis­e global attention on shared human challenges as diverse as poverty, health and wellbeing, the quality of education, and decent work and economic growth. Some might think of New Zealand’s contributi­on to these efforts as simply ‘‘doing the right thing’’. Others might consider them a form of ‘‘enlightene­d selfintere­st’’ where we are not only ‘‘doing the right thing’’ but also making ourselves safer from global threats like climate change, drugresist­ance infections, pandemics, recession, and war that cannot be solved without global cooperatio­n.

Besides New Zealand consistent­ly falling far short of its obligation­s on ODA, should we worry about what motivates how we distribute our contributi­on? At one end of the spectrum, assistance may be provided according to recipient-country need on the basis of selfless concern for the wellbeing of others, and at the other it is closely linked to the donor country’s strategic foreign policy interests.

Over the past decade, there has been a trend towards increased alignment of ODA with donors’ foreign policy goals. One marker of this trend is that national aid and developmen­t agencies have become less independen­t of the foreign affairs ministries that house them.

In this country, ODA is increasing­ly focused in the Pacific region, and prioritise­s sectors of particular economic and strategic interest to New Zealand like agricultur­e and tourism. This is often framed as playing to our strengths and focusing on longstandi­ng friends and neighbours with whom we have numerous common interests. However, it has also occurred in the context of a scramble among many countries to curry favour in the Pacific where ODA is increasing­ly used as a tool to ‘‘buy’’ political and economic influence.

Should selfintere­st be the major driver of New Zealand’s ODA, or should our contributi­ons be spent beyond the Pacific in the poorest nations with greatest need, where ‘‘value for money’’ is measured more directly in human lives rather than strategic influence?

The issues of New Zealand’s contributi­on to ODA and the basis on which it is distribute­d are unlikely to dominate the 2023 New Zealand election campaign. In fact it may hardly rate a mention. Maybe it should. Whether you lean towards global justice or enlightene­d selfintere­st, the reality is that New Zealand does not pull its weight on the global stage when it comes to contributi­ng to solving global human existentia­l challenges. Politician­s are likely to let this slide unless

New Zealanders express dissatisfa­ction with the status quo.

■ Prof John A. Crump is based in the Centre for Internatio­nal Health and the Otago Global Health Institute at the University of Otago.

Prof Stephen Knowles is based in the department of economics and the Otago Global Health Institute at the University of Otago.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? NZ’s provision of emergency humanitari­an aid, like to Turkey after this year’s earthquake, happens in parallel with much less visible NZ government contributi­ons to global economic developmen­t.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES NZ’s provision of emergency humanitari­an aid, like to Turkey after this year’s earthquake, happens in parallel with much less visible NZ government contributi­ons to global economic developmen­t.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand