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The former top diplomat at the Foreign Office has warned it is “vital” for Britain’s reputation the government ensures a contentious multi-billion pound cut to the overseas aid budget remains a “temporary” measure.
Lord McDonald, who will deliver his maiden speech in the House of Lords this week afer being awarded a life peerage, claimed the UK remained in the “premier league” for aid spending, but told The Independent: “There’s no way to present this as a great move”.
His comments come after Boris Johnson reneged on the Conservative election manifesto pledge to maintain 0.7 per cent of gross national income on overseas aid spending, announcing at the spending review last year it would be reduced to 0.5 per cent — a cut of around £4 billion.
Due to the severe impact of the coronavirus pandemic on Britain’s economy, the UK’s Overseas Development Assistance (ODA) spending had already been drastically reduced in 2020.
Within weeks, the government will have to decide which aid programmes to cut or scale back in the coming financial year and on Monday the United Nations will hold a crucial pledging event where member states will be expected to announce pledges to address the humanitarian crisis in Yemen.
The UK government provided around £200 million to the war-ravaged region in 2019 while a further £214 million was pledged in aid throughout 2020 to address “famine conditions”, with citizens facing starvation, death and destitution. It is understood the Foreign Office minister James Cleverly will attend the meeting, but it remains unclear whether there will be a reduction of aid spending in Yemen.
Asked whether the overall cut to overseas aid budget would undermine the Global Britain strategy pursued by Mr Johnson’s government, Lord McDonald replied: “£10 billion is still a huge amount of money and if you look around the OECD the number of countries that are at or close to 0.7 is very small.
“I don’t think that this undermines our reputation, I think we are still in the premier league of ODA donors, but it’s still a cut the community is very sensitive to and minds even if it doesn’t demote us to a lower division amongst aid givers.”
However, he went on: “It’s clearly not ideal, the timing — to say the least — is unfortunate. It is vital to our reputation to stress that it is temporary and that we plan to restore the 0.7 per cent. I can buy the government’s narrative on this.”
“They [government] have said it was temporary and that their ambition was to restore it.”
Lord McDonald added: “There’s no way to present this as a great move. The fact we were at 0.7 per cent was widely praised in the development community. That we are no longer a 0.7 per cent spender is going to be noticed and regretted. But given the pressures the economy is under, the government is under, it’s something that can be explained while simultaneously being regretted.”
Announcing the cut last year — opposed by four living UK prime ministers — the chancellor Rishi Sunak said it would be temporary, but did not set a date for the budget being restored, saying only: “Our intention is to return to 0.7 per cent when the fiscal situation allows”. Foreign secretary Dominic Raab also told MPs he could not guarantee when the multi-billion cut could be reversed in the “foreseeable, immediate future”.
Lord McDonald said he was not surprised by the announcement, but stressed the timing, given the earlier decision to merge the Department for International Development and the Foreign Office, “was to say the least unfortunate”.
He added: “This is a merger I believe in, I think that the UK if it is to carry weight on the international stage needs a single foreign policy, so having one ministry lead that is logical, but looking at component parts, the FCO half was much happier about that idea than the DfID part.
“We are in the early stages of a merger which is particularly controversial amongst the development aid community and within weeks the budget is at least temporarily cut, so the timing could not have been worse, even though I understood the motivation.
“My second thought was that were other ways to skin this cat and one of the things I hope will change over time with our spending of ODA is that we will spend it on a wider variety of issues. That is what I would have advocated had I still been in the Foreign Office.
“Rather than cut the budget, we apply it more broadly. This is a negotiation that has been going on many years with the DAC committee in Paris, which is the relevant committee of the OECD. I don’t feel this is the moment to push that agenda, but I was not there and that did not happen.”
Lord McDonald, who was reportedly named on a Whitehall “hit list” of three permanent secretaries No 10 wanted to replace before he left his post last summer, served as the most senior civil servant at the Foreign Office between 2015 and 2020 — working closely alongside Philip Hammond, Jeremy Hunt, Mr Johnson and Dominic Raab.
Pressed on his experience of working with Mr Johnson while he was foreign secretary, Lord McDonald, who first joined the diplomatic service almost four decades ago, replied: “I enjoyed working with Boris Johnson.
“I was running the Foreign Office and he was a clear, personable foreign secretary to work for. He knew that I was not a Brexiteer, but he also knew I was a civil servant and I knew my job was to deliver the government’s policy as best as I and my ministry could. On that basis we had a good working relationship”.
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