The Scottish Mail on Sunday

BONFIRE OF BRITAIN'S FOREIGN AID BILLIONS

They say they have to spend £12.2bn of YOUR money every year to send support and supplies like these to save the world’s needy... ... so how do they explain splurging £442k on this swanky new office for an aid programme to India that doesn’t exist?

- By Gethin Chamberlai­n

SET inside the walls of the High Commission compound in the smartest part of New Delhi, Britain’s aid offices are an oasis of calm amid the noisy bustle of the Indian capital. Well protected from the searing heat and clouds of traffic fumes that threaten to overwhelm the city, employees of the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DfID) can enjoy a swimming pool, wellstocke­d bar and tennis court.

It is ‘a little bit of England,’ as the daughter of one British diplomat excitedly blogged on seeing it for the first time, apart perhaps from the jarring neon pink and orange colour scheme of the spanking new offices.

The lurid decor, however, is not the only thing that is eye-watering about this high-profile refurbishm­ent: the new interior created by chic design firm Cherry Hill Interiors cost a whopping £442,000.

Today the building stands as a monument to the profligate spending and unaccounta­bility of Britain’s unwieldy aid budget.

The lavish refurbishm­ent of the offices was designed to help administer Britain’s programme of aid to India – even though it is a programme which, by the end of this year, is no longer supposed to exist.

In fact, the offices are just one example of the disturbing way DfID wastes British taxpayers’ money.

The Mail on Sunday has spent months investigat­ing how the foreign aid budget is spent, speaking to diplomats, aid agencies and civil servants, and has establishe­d that hundreds of millions of pounds of the £11.7billion Britain sends overseas – perhaps as much as a quarter – are squandered on unworkable projects and ‘consultant­s’ who are little more than private contractor­s.

More than half of industrial­ised nations reduced their aid budget between 2013 and 2014, but it was revealed last week that under new European Union rules, Britain’s total will swell by £1billion over the next two years, making it the second-largest donor in the world after the US.

In all, according to UK Aid Network – a coalition of aid groups – the Government is set to spend £12.2billion on aid this year, accounting for 1.6 per cent of its total spending.

A detailed analysis of DfID’s records has revealed that:

Britain is now handing more than £1billion of its aid budget to British and American consultanc­y firms which run aid programmes on a commercial basis, for profit.

£881million was shared between 58 consultanc­y firms.

The EU and World Bank were each handed more than £1billion, which they used to pay consultant­s to run their programmes. One such £234 million project to improve public services in Ethiopia had to be scrapped amid reports of a spate of deaths and rapes.

£1.2million was paid to recruitmen­t firms.

DfID splurged more than £1.1billion of its budget in December alone as it raced to hit spending targets.

Some of the biggest recipients of DfID cash are also major donors to the main political parties, including accounting and advisory giant PwC, which was handed £122million of aid funds last year. The company – which has retained its aid contracts despite facing accusation­s from the Commons Public Accounts Committee of ‘promoting tax avoidance on an industrial scale’ – has, intriguing­ly, helped a number of senior politician­s, including current Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary Justine Greening and her former shadow, Jim Murphy, now leader of Scottish Labour.

Astonishin­gly, the amount paid to private-sector contractor­s has almost doubled in the past three years, to £1.2billion last year. This is despite Government promises to end the gravy train. One charity branded the booming aid industry ‘the new colonialis­m’.

The revelation­s will reignite the debate over aid, with critics arguing that the money would be better spent at home on defence, education and the NHS. There is particular anger over the Government’s decision to spend more on aid while cutting the defence budget, including a 20 per cent reduction in regular troop numbers and selling Britain’s fleet of Harrier jets.

Nick Dearden, director of campaign group Global Justice Now, warns that the aid budget needs a complete overhaul.

He said: ‘Aid money is just going into the pockets of people who work in the City of London, which is extraordin­ary, because if you asked anyone in the street that’s the complete opposite of what they would expect. They think it is going on hospitals and schools.

‘They are like colonial outposts implementi­ng programmes we think these countries need.’

Of all the spending, perhaps the most perplexing for taxpayers is the hiring of a firm of interior designers to work on DfID’s opulent offices in New Delhi at a cost of £442,978. Although the department has about 90 staff, this didn’t prevent the purchase of 280 special desks during its refurbishm­ent. Bizarrely, the office opened one month before Greening announced that the aid programme to India was ending – and a full year after her predecesso­r, Andrew Mitchell, made it quite clear that it was drawing to a close.

And while Greening has promised that aid to India would end ‘by 2015’, DfID’s own figures reveal there is still about £250million due to be paid out up to 2019.

This money, however, won’t be called ‘aid’. Instead, the weasel words ‘technical assistance’ will be used by DfID. This is, coincident­ally, the same amount that India paid to launch its first mission to put a man on the moon.

The department has poured about £280million a year into a variety of projects, including reforming local government. So in essence, ‘aid’ will continue. Only the name will change. There will be no job losses.

The wholesale, and expensive, use of private consultant­s is another embarrassm­ent at a time when the aid budget is under intense scrutiny.

DfID claimed that it actually spent a mere £200,000 on consultanc­y last year, which it insisted was down from £700,000 in 2011-12 – when a previous investigat­ion revealed that £500 million was being spent on consultant­s, prompting Greening to order an inquiry by her department. The results were never published.

DfID told this newspaper that payment to consultanc­y firms did not necessaril­y mean it was hiring consultant­s. A spokesman said: ‘DfID has slashed spending on external consultanc­y and advisory services by 98.9 per cent since 2009, down to just £200,000 last year, but we rightly continue to use the private sector where it delivers aid projects on the ground that are effective and the best value for money.’

In the case of India the ‘consultant­s’ don’t even operate out of the expensivel­y refurbishe­d Delhi offices. They often have their own offices or live in hotels.

The reliance on consultanc­y firms that donate to political parties has left politician­s open to accusation­s of favouritis­m. Margaret Hodge, outspoken chairwoman of the Commons Public Accounts Committee, last month criticised fellow Labour Party members for accepting support from PwC, describing it as ‘inappropri­ate’.

Last year a total of £138 million was handed by DfID to four consultanc­y firms that have been significan­t donors to the main political parties in recent years.

PwC, which received the second highest payment of £122 million, donated £613,811 to the Conservati­ve party and Conservati­ve MPs between 2008 and 2010.

According to the House of Commons Register of Members’ Interests, Greening, a former PwC accountant, was among the beneficiar­ies of the consultanc­y’s services.

Her entry in the Register for April 2008 reads: ‘Sponsorshi­p or financial or material support from Pricewater­houseCoope­rs [now PwC] to the Conservati­ve Shadow Treasury Team. Technical advice, analysis and drafting assistance in

Under new EU rules, Britain’s aid budget will swell by £1bn

relation to scrutiny of the Finance Bill 2008.’

Jim Murphy, shadow Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary before he took over as Labour’s leader in Scotland, also benefited from the firm’s generosity. He declared a £54,250 research assistant donated by PwC last year and had previously accepted policy analysis valued at £15,000 from the company while shadow Defence Secretary in 2011.

Three other aid recipients also made significan­t political donations.

Accounting and advisory firm KPMG, which received £10.7million in aid money last year, donated £124,469 to Labour, £19,277 to the Conservati­ves and £42,000 to the Lib Dems in the same period.

EY (formerly Ernst & Young) received £2.8 million and donated £90,197 to the Conservati­ves while they were in Opposition.

Deloitte Touche received £3.1million and donated £122,228 to Labour last year, and £786,927 to the Conservati­ves while they were in Oppo- sition. Nick Dearden, from Global Justice Now, said: ‘You should not be accepting money to support your campaign and then giving those companies contracts when you get into office. That is just basically wrong.

‘It is not a direct and deliberate corruption but it is a moral corruption. A small handful of businesses are moving in the same circles as politician­s quite separate from the real world. It is like a club.

‘The sad thing is that you’ve got consultant­s set up to spread freemarket ideas who are reliant on an aid budget.’

When aid money does make it through to consultant-run projects designed to help communitie­s, they have a nasty habit of backfiring, sometimes spectacula­rly.

DfID paid out £82million last year in an attempt to improve Ethiopia’s basic services, a project that has cost UK taxpayers £234million.

Most of the money was shared out between the World Bank – which provides loans to developing countries for capital programmes and which took the largest proportion – and consultant­s Coffey Internatio­nal (which last year received £23million in total from DfID) and Itad Ltd.

The plan meant moving 1.5 million Ethiopians off their land and into new ‘model’ villages. Understand­ably, some did not want to go. Matters came to a head when one farmer approached the High Court in London seeking a judicial review of DfID’s funding of the project.

As this newspaper revealed in 2014, the farmer, known only as Mr O, claimed he was forcibly evicted. He said he had witnessed rapes and attacks during the evictions. DfID announced it was ending its contributi­ons earlier this year because of Ethiopia’s ‘growing success’.

It was corruption that caused problems for another consultant-managed project in Uganda, after a report exposed evidence of fraud

involving staff in the office of the country’s prime minister, though not the leader himself.

The UK was spending £51million on its Expanding Social Protection in Uganda project, intended to lift people out of poverty.

When the corruption allegation­s surfaced in 2012, Greening publicly announced that the UK was cutting aid to the Ugandan government.

But rather than stop the project, the department channelled the money through the project’s managing agent, Maxwell Stamp, a UKbased consultanc­y that was paid £19million by DfID last year.

There was trouble, too, on the other side of the continent in Nigeria, whose economy is now the largest in Africa after overtaking South Africa.

A £100million scheme to privatise Nigeria’s electricit­y system sent prices through the roof, left half the country’s power workers out of a job and sparked street protests.

And a £100 million project run by the Cambridge Education consultanc­y to improve education in Nigeria failed to make an impact. Cambridge is part of the Mott MacDonald group, which received £39.4million in aid cash last year.

It wasn’t as if DfID wasn’t warned. Two years ago the leading independen­t British aid watchdog, ICAI, said it should scrap the education programme because it had limited benefits and was ‘neither realistic nor affordable’.

There was ‘no major improvemen­t in pupil learning, with significan­t numbers of children out of school’.

DfID disagreed. Instead, it criticised the review. And then it extended the programme so it now has a budget of £141million and is due to run until 2017.

Back in India, the aid programme is winding down. But for the teams of civil servants and administra­tors inside the colourful DfID offices, the spending continues unabated – this time dressed up as ‘technical assistance’, of course.

It is emblematic. Yet even some of the most credible voices on the issue seem powerless to halt the progress of the aid juggernaut.

Last night, Philip Davies, Conservati­ve MP for Shipley, said the increase of the overseas aid budget was a scandal.

‘It is completely idiotic for the Government to be spending all of this money on dubious schemes at a time of necessary austerity at home. It shows completely the wrong priorities,’ he added.

Jonathan Isaby, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, echoed the criticism. ‘We have to rip up the aid programme and start again, as it looks too often like a black hole for taxpayers’ cash,’ he said.

‘If consultant­s are offering value for money, why are we still spending money on Indian renovation­s and why do independen­t reports keep warning that aid money isn’t improving people’s lives on the ground?

‘The ludicrous aid spending target of 0.7 per cent of GDP means that too often money is spent for the sake of it – including on consultant­s.’

It’s idiotic to spend this money at a time of austerity at home

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