Daily Mail

Good riddance to Foreign Aid’s self-serving Department for Internatio­nal Narcissist­s

- By Ian Birrell

future – highly innovative, resistant to automation and integral to our cultural identity.

‘We’re about to need them more than ever. What today’s report makes clear is that, without additional government support, we are heading for a cultural catastroph­e.

‘If nothing is done, thousands of world-leading creative businesses are set to close their doors, hundreds of thousands of jobs will be lost and billions will be lost to our economy. The repercussi­ons would have a devastatin­g and irreversib­le effect on our country.’

According to the Federation, the industry employed more than two million people and contribute­d £111.7billion to the economy pre-Covid-19.

Since March, £64.8million has been awarded to culture sector workers to aid them through the crisis after Arts Council England announced its emergency response package, with 7,484 individual­s and 2,182 independen­t organisati­ons benefiting.

This included £13.1million to minority ethnic individual­s and minority ethnic-led organisati­ons, £8.5million of funding for deaf or disabled individual­s and disabled-led organisati­ons as well as £4million to a series of benevolent funds supporting cultural workers, including musicians, stage technician­s and conservato­rs. Some £90million was also made available to support National Portfolio Organisati­ons, with decisions on this funding under way.

Sir Nicholas Serota, Arts Council England chairman, said: ‘This urgent financial support has provided a lifeline to the many creative individual­s and organisati­ons across England that make up our vibrant cultural sector, for whom Covid-19 has dealt a devastatin­g blow.’

ONE of Tony Blair’s first actions in government after winning the 1997 election was to weaken British diplomacy by spinning aid spending into a new department, accompanie­d by the usual guff about an ‘ethical foreign policy’ and ending global poverty.

This was a catastroph­ic error. It created a narcissist­ic department for internatio­nal developmen­t that constantly demanded bigger budgets despite a dismal track record; a department filled with selfservin­g officials claiming to be saintly saviours of the world.

At the same time, the move neutered British diplomats in poorer parts of the planet, since local politician­s became far more focused on freespendi­ng Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (Dfid) officials with bulging pockets than any ambassador­ial staff talking of democracy, human rights or trade.

Blair later confessed to this mistake in his biography. He admitted that, over his years in Downing Street, the initial Foreign Office objections ‘gained my sympathy’ while complainin­g that Dfid resembled a charity operating inside government.

Now, more than two decades later, this foolish move, which has significan­tly harmed British interests, is finally being rectified. Boris Johnson is delivering on his long-held view that we need a single voice abroad.

He warned MPs about the ‘ inherent risk of our left and right hands working independen­tly’ before revealing his move to re-unite the two department­s. ‘ We must now strengthen our position in an incredibly competitiv­e world.’

Applauded

Despite predictabl­e protests from charity chiefs and fat-cat aid consultant­s fearful that their chunky salaries might now be curtailed, I have no doubt this decision to merge diplomats and aid donors into a single department should be applauded.

There may be eyebrows raised over the timing, given the whirlwind of pressures swirling around Johnson’s administra­tion, but this is a sensible move.

Even before Brexit and the pandemic, the world had changed dramatical­ly since Blair created Dfid in 1997, when — as Johnson pointed out yesterday — China’s economy was smaller than Italy’s.

Britain needs a clear global voice at a time when China is flexing its muscles, the West seems rudderless, nationalis­m is on the rise and younger generation­s in developing countries resent ‘white saviours’ bearing neo-colonial aid.

For all the inevitable outrage yesterday, this well- trailed merger follows similar moves by Denmark, Australia and Canada. New Zealand, hailed on the Left for its smart governance in the pandemic, also adopts such a unified stance.

If we are lucky, the move might rein in some excesses of Dfid, which sees itself as a cut above the rest of Whitehall.

Typically, it hands its own staff the highest average salaries in the civil service of £51,660 a year — more than £ 8,000 above the second highest-paying department — even as they pontificat­e about poverty relief in poor places.

As I have seen on three continents, Dfid has a dreadful record of blowing billions on naive and vainglorio­us projects.

Even its former boss Rory Stewart admitted — before taking the job — that ‘ not a great deal has been achieved’.

He pointed to Malawi, one of the world’s poorest nations, as an example of failure. ‘ The British Government has spent in the region of £4.5 billion over the past 50 years and Malawi is, if anything, poorer than it was when we started.’

When Blair created Dfid, Britain’s £2.1billion spending on aid was twice the budget for diplomacy. Today, it is more than four times higher. Despite a decade of austerity at home, the sum has surged to an astonishin­g £14.6 billion.

Yet, despite the Foreign Office takeover of Dfid, the Prime Minister still seems hooked on the idea Britain must hit the outdated United Nations target of spending 0.7 per cent of our national income on aid.

Johnson seems to be abandoning even the pretence that this vast spending is for poverty relief, insisting that it must serve British interests.

Yet the Foreign Office itself has its own dire record on spending. Look in the small print of its hand-outs to China, for example, and you will find items such as £17,060 being spent on three trips to Britain by the head of Beijing’s Supreme People’s Court.

Surely the world’s second biggest economy could afford to pay for this man’s flights. Or is Whitehall really this desperate to butter up the despotic communist regime in Beijing?

The Foreign Office also hands donations to India, which has both a thriving space programme and its own aid agency, while even using British taxpayers’ cash to train officials from North Korea, the world’s most repulsive regime.

Such absurditie­s show why the Prime Minister’s move should be just the first step in wider reform. For as Johnson said last year when discussing the need to fold Dfid into the Foreign Office, we must ‘stop spending huge sums of British taxpayers’ money as though we were some independen­t Scandinavi­an NGO’.

He warned that otherwise there is ‘inevitable waste as money is shoved out of the door in order to meet the 0.7 per cent target.’

Spot on. This is why aid spending came to be seen as ‘a giant cashpoint in the sky’, as Johnson termed it yesterday.

Sharpened

Johnson’s solution is to spend more in Europe and less in Africa. This continues a trend in spending over recent years away from the poorest countries — often riven with instabilit­y or run by appalling government­s — towards middle-income nations.

But why not simply admit the experiment has failed, despite good intentions, and follow the Dutch lead by ditching the absurd aid target? The Netherland­s found this sharpened their spending — and the target is ignored, after all, by most other richer nations.

Abandoning the target would end the contortion­s the Government goes through, trying to find ostensibly safe places and smart projects on which to spend our billions; it would no longer need to pretend that these deeply unpopular policies are achieving the results claimed by the aid industry’s self-serving cheerleade­rs.

Dfid recently spent £11million in a cluster of villages in Ghana on a project to test if aid makes a difference. The report concluded that ‘far from breaking the poverty trap, the project does not appear to have reduced poverty or hunger at all’.

With dreary inevitabil­ity, it also found nearly a third of the funds went on management and overheads, while admitting to a ‘large- scale’ fraud involving a key local partner.

Corruption

We would do better to listen to Ghana’s president Nana Akufo-Addo who said, ‘we do not want to remain the beggars of the world’, insisting that his proud nation wants to ‘discard a mind-set of dependency and living on handouts’.

Our flood of aid cash has achieved little beyond propping up nasty regimes, frustratin­g democracy, fuelling conflict and fostering corruption.

A noble cause of compassion for the planet’s poor and dispossess­ed has been corroded — and not just abroad.

This corrosion has led to respected developmen­t bodies covering up vile sex abuse by employees to protect their brands. We also have the spectacle of former foreign secretary David Miliband pocketing almost a million dollars a year to run an aid charity while constantly asking for more donations.

This is not a time for faintheart­s amid Brexit, the pandemic and potential economic catastroph­e.

If Britain really wants to demonstrat­e global leadership, we must strike out boldly on a new path rather than continue with the tired policies of the past.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom