The Daily Telegraph

Labour can’t promise 0.7pc in foreign aid, says Lammy

- By Daniel Martin DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

LABOUR declined to commit to spending 0.7 per cent of national income on internatio­nal aid, saying it would be “irresponsi­ble” to do so.

David Lammy, the shadow foreign secretary, said in a speech at Chatham House in London that he wanted the UK to be a “developmen­t superpower once more”.

But he said the economic situation was such that it would be the wrong course of action to pledge to return to the 0.7 per cent figure now. The statutory duty to spend this proportion of national income was introduced by David Cameron in 2015.

But in 2021, thanks to the impact of the pandemic, this was temporaril­y reduced under Boris Johnson to 0.5 per cent – saving billions of pounds.

In last year’s autumn statement, Jeremy Hunt said the UK would not return to 0.7 per cent “until the fiscal situation allows”.

Mr Lammy’s comments about 0.7 per cent came after he was asked why Labour would not commit to return that level if it wins the next election. “We are determined to win power in 2024,” he said. “And in a cost of living crisis where people are struggling to put food on the table, with inflation rising and costs soaring it would be irresponsi­ble for us to set out our spending at this stage. It is just too turbulent.”

Mr Lammy said: “Ultimately, this will be a decision for Keir Starmer which he, I am sure, will signal closer to a general election.”

In his speech, he said: “My vision is of a ‘Britain Reconnecte­d’. Secure at home and strong abroad. A confident country, outside of the EU but a leader in Europe once again. A reliable partner, a dependable ally and a good neighbour. Nato’s leading European power. A developmen­t superpower once more. At the vanguard of climate action. Driving forward the industries of the future for Britain. A diplomatic entreprene­ur. And a country that keeps its word.”

Mr Lammy promised that a Labour government would “modernise developmen­t”. “Our developmen­t policy must still aim at reducing global poverty,” he said. “It should be proudly feminist, prioritisi­ng women and girls. With climate action and solidarity at the aid budget’s heart. But it must also have a new focus on partnershi­p, mutual respect and shared interests.

“Take the example of the fair distributi­on of vaccines around the world. While Europeans were vaccinated many times over, much of the world waited for a first dose.

“This cannot happen again. But our goal must be bigger: for intellectu­al property and manufactur­ing capacity to be shared around the world so that countries are producing their own vaccines, not waiting for our leftovers.”

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