Cameron may be breaking OECD aid rules to placate Tory backbenchers

David Cameron's proposal to allow development aid to be used to fund military spending risks breaking OECD as well as Britain's own International Development Act.

Charlie Samuda is a Vice Chair of the Labour Campaign for International Development

The Labour Campaign for International Development (LCID) warned before the 2010 election that there was a risk the Conservatives would divert the aid budget away from poverty reduction and towards national security.

Today’s news that hundreds of millions of pounds may be diverted to peacekeeping defence operations in bid to placate backbenchers proves those warnings right.

And it wasn’t just us – before the election Save the Children told Left Foot Forward that they were:

“Very concerned that the Conservatives’ security spokesperson…left open the possibility of significant aid funds being diverted into stabilisation units.”

If Cameron is to do this he may end up breaking the rules laid down by the OECD and indeed our own International Development Act of 2002 in the process.

As LCID’s Honorary Co-President Glenys Kinnock said this morning:

“The Development Assistance Committee of OECD guidelines are very clear on what qualifies as aid – hope PM has read them.”

No 10 said the aid budget could be ‘used to fund military spending in three areas; security, demobilisation and peacekeeping‘.

Yet the OECD guidelines explicitly state that the enforcement aspects of peacekeeping are not reportable as ODA:

“Military aid: No military equipment or services are reportable as ODA. Anti-terrorism activities are also excluded.

Peacekeeping: Most peacekeeping expenditures are excluded in line with the exclusion of military costs. ”

The 2002 International Development Act is also explicit in its requirement that British aid be spend on poverty reduction alone.

As Patrick Watt, Save the Children’s director of development, told the Guardian in 2010;

“What is the real driver of aid allocation? Is it poverty, is it need and the ability to use money effectively or is it the agenda of the National Security Council? We do need to have a balanced approach to aid allocation that reflects the principles of the 2002 International Development Act which stipulates that all aid should be for poverty reduction.”

Indeed DFID’s own website states;

“The 2002 Act is drafted in such a way that a policy such as ‘tied aid’ (and the Aid and Trade Provision), in which assistance is given for the purpose of promoting UK trade or for other commercial or political reasons, would now be challengeable in the courts.”

LCID does not object to the coalition’s decision to focus 30% of the aid budget on the world’s most fragile states. But we object strongly to any attempt to raid the aid budget to make up for the cuts the Government have made our armed forces.

6 Responses to “Cameron may be breaking OECD aid rules to placate Tory backbenchers”

  1. LB

    Nothing like spending people’s pension money.

    Will the receipiants of the overseas aid, do likewise when the UK government is declared bankrupt?

  2. Mick

    Sound common sense. The army runs on a shoestring whilst the foreign aid bill soars and soars. £14 billion by 2015, it was announced, with no ceiling imposed.

    We give money to places like Egypt, run by volatile Islamic extremists who, far from grateful, hate us all anyway. And India, a country with its OWN adid programme, not to mention space and nuclear ones.

    Oh and Africa, who governments turn the UN into a circus and who are the ones to blame for the poverty of its people.

    Looks like our masters, Labour especially when they were in, need to attach some pretty thick strings to our much scarce money.

    MORE IN HERE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CsaDsDGQmIM

  3. Newsbot9

    Yes, of course you want to use aid to shoot people. Shows your Right’s priorities perfectly – your “common sense” is totalitarian.

    Keep fighting trade leverage, it gets us involved in the world. Oh, and it’s profitable. CAN’T BE ALLOWED!

    You also keep spending British citizens money, Hatese.

  4. Newsbot9

    Yes, you’d know all about that. And of course you’re trying to bankrupt the country, foreigner.

  5. Mick

    No, I’m saying make sure you pay for your own stuff before paying for other people. Newsbot knows how people here cry out as much as anyone.

    And ‘trade leverage’? Newsbot makes a point. Cameron uses ‘aid’ money to grease Indian palms in political business deals. Well I’m sorry Mr. Heir To Blair, that cash is supposed to be for all those poor people. And not to boost funds the businessmen should be paying with private capital for jobs to boost the outsource trade.

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