Civil Service World

WHAT AID CUTS MEAN FOR GLOBAL BRITAIN

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DR PHILIP A. BERRY AND DR JOE DEVANNY ARGUE THAT BORIS JOHNSON HAS OVERTURNED 15 YEARS OF CONSERVATI­VE PARTY POLICY ON DEVELOPMEN­T MOVING TOWARDS A NARROWER VISION OF “GLOBAL BRITAIN”

During November’s Spending Review, chancellor of the exchequer Rishi Sunak announced the government’s intention to temporaril­y abandon spending 0.7% of gross national income on Official Developmen­t Assistance. Instead, the chancellor outlined plans to spend 0.5% of GNI on overseas aid next year, saving approximat­ely £4bn. With Britain facing its worst recession in 300 years, the chancellor is in an unenviable position as he seeks to balance the books. The decision to reduce ODA spending, however, should not be viewed solely as a short-term measure to alleviate challengin­g economic circumstan­ces, but as the end of the cross-party consensus on internatio­nal developmen­t that has held for approximat­ely 15 years.

The decision to cut the aid budget, combined with the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t’s merger with the Foreign and Commonweal­th Office in September 2020, reflects sharp disagreeme­nt within the Conservati­ve Party regarding the level and function of overseas aid, which stretches back half a century.

These decisions are further proof that Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve Party has moved away from some of the centrist policies adopted by his predecesso­rs and, more importantl­y to internatio­nal allies, has a different conception of Britain’s “soft power”.

Five former prime ministers, including three Conservati­ves, have reportedly disapprove­d of Johnson’s decision to cut the aid budget.

Since David Cameron’s election as Conservati­ve leader in

2005, the party had fully embraced the internatio­nal developmen­t agenda and committed to the target of 0.7% of GNI for ODA. Support for internatio­nal developmen­t was an important part of Cameron’s rebranding of the party and relocation of it to the political centre ground after three successive election defeats. The move was not solely positional: Cameron was personally supportive of developmen­t as a moral imperative and a means of boosting Britain’s soft power. His support for internatio­nal developmen­t was also shared by other senior Conservati­ve MPs, most notably his first internatio­nal developmen­t secretary, Andrew Mitchell.

Significan­tly, and in the face of considerab­le political opposition, the Conservati­ve-Liberal Democrat coalition government (2010-15) was the first British government ever to meet the internatio­nally-recognised 0.7% of GNI target for ODA in 2013. The target was then, with Cameron’s tacit support following a private member’s bill initiated by a Liberal Democrat MP, enshrined in law in 2015.

“Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve Party has moved away from some of the centrist policies adopted by his predecesso­rs and has a different conception of Britain’s soft power”

Despite this support for aid at the top of the party, there was always a dissenting faction. Not all Conservati­ve MPs, members or aligned media were enthusiast­ic about Cameron’s determinat­ion to meet the 0.7% target, or indeed to retain DfID as an independen­t department amid public sector austerity. This dissenting faction was partly motivated by a view that developmen­t was being wrongly prioritise­d over more traditiona­l Conservati­ve commitment­s, such as to defence spending. Johnson’s simultaneo­us cut to the aid budget and increase in the defence budget is a clear indication of his relatively consistent position in this intra-party debate.

Johnson’s views on developmen­t were well known before his ascent to the premiershi­p. For example, in 2019 he argued: “We can’t keep spending huge sums of taxpayers’ money as though we were some independen­t Scandinavi­an NGO… The present system is leading to inevitable waste as money is shoved out of the door in order to meet the 0.7% target [for spending]”. Whereas this view was the dissenting voice against the party leader

ship under David Cameron and Theresa May, it has now become the party orthodoxy, against which supporters of aid must argue.

Several centrist Conservati­ve MPs have been dismayed by the decision to cut aid, with one, Baroness Sugg, resigning from her ministeria­l position in protest. It is likely that the government will face a parliament­ary rebellion, led by Andrew Mitchell, when it ultimately introduces legislatio­n to repeal the 0.7% spending target.

The rebels are concerned that the decision to repeal the law – despite assurance from the chancellor that the move is temporary – indicates that the government’s longer-term intention is not to reinstate the 0.7% target when the public finances are restored to health. It is unclear if a Conservati­ve rebellion in the House of Commons – or a similar effort in the House of Lords – will have the numbers to inflict a parliament­ary defeat on the government. Johnson presides over a different party – in parliament and in the compositio­n of its electoral support – than did Cameron or May.

And what about public opinion? Some polling suggests that the public broadly supports the decision to cut aid. In the context of Brexit and the coronaviru­s pandemic, with a widespread assumption that – defence and a small number of other protected sectors notwithsta­nding – further domestic spending cuts are likely, it is perhaps unsurprisi­ng that public opinion supports cutting aid too. The decision is, neverthele­ss, further evidence of Johnson’s disjointed approach to what was meant to be his Integrated Review of Security, Defence, Developmen­t and Foreign Policy. A symbolic decision to, as Andrew Mitchell once put it, “balance the books on the backs of the poorest people in the world,” does not bode well for Britain’s global standing, ahead of a year in which a new US president is inaugurate­d and Britain has the presidenci­es of two prominent multilater­al meetings, the G7 and COP26. After nearly eighteen months in office, we are finally seeing the shape of Johnson’s vision of the national interest and what “Global Britain” will mean in practice. It is a narrower, meaner vision of Britain’s role in the world, with its “soft power” diminished.

Dr Philip A. Berry and Dr Joe Devanny are lecturers in the Department of War Studies at King’s College London. They write here in a personal capacity

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10 | February 2021
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 ??  ?? UK aid A Syrian refugee camp during a visit by then-internatio­nal developmen­t secretary Justine Greening in 2016
UK aid A Syrian refugee camp during a visit by then-internatio­nal developmen­t secretary Justine Greening in 2016

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