Andrew Mitchell: The power of the UK's aid target
In response to the House of Lords report on the UK's aid target, Andrew Mitchell reaffirmed Britain's commitment to the world's poorest people.

鈥淲e welcome the Committee鈥檚 ringing endorsement of the tough reforms the Coalition Government has made to get maximum value for money from British aid.
鈥淭he British Government makes no apologies for sticking to its commitments to the world鈥檚 poorest people.
鈥淪pending less than one per cent of our national income on aid - an internationally agreed target - will create a safer and more prosperous world for the UK. And it will get 11 million children into school, vaccinate 55 million children against preventable diseases and stop 250,000 newborn babies dying needlessly. Going back on this promise would cost lives.鈥�
The International Development Secretary has previously confirmed the UK will spend 0.7% of Gross National Income (GNI) on international development from 2013, making it the first country in the G20 to keep this promise.
Highlights from the report
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The report recognises the department鈥檚 new direction, highlighting:
- The focus on economic growth as a key way to combat global poverty
- The essential emphasis on the role of the private sector in development
- The concentration of our direct aid programmes to 27 countries - a reduction in the number of countries we work in - to help increase the impact of aid
Commenting on the effectiveness of Britain鈥檚 aid programme, the report notes:
鈥溾xpert opinion is virtually united in agreement that DFID enjoys an outstanding reputation internationally as an effective aid agent.
鈥淚t has refined the Government鈥檚 approach to aid over a number of years. Now, under an energetic Secretary of State, it is taking direct action to deal with points made by aid critics by for example, increasing its emphasis on promoting private investment and on containing unrestricted budgetary support.鈥�
What are others saying?
Bill Gates
Microsoft founder and co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
鈥淚鈥檓 concerned by the Committee鈥檚 report regarding the government鈥檚 aid budget. The UK leads the world in delivering smart, targeted aid - I鈥檝e seen for myself on the ground the incredible impact of its life-saving investments.
鈥淎bandoning the 0.7 target risks undermining the incredible progress that has been achieved over the last several years. Well-targeted UK aid has helped save millions of lives by rolling back the malaria and HIV epidemics and bringing the world closer to eradicating polio once and for all and we are on the brink of some more tremendous breakthroughs.
鈥淚 commend the UK Government for its steadfast commitment to the world鈥檚 poor.鈥�
**Lord Paddy Ashdown
**UNICEF UK President
鈥淪crapping the 0.7% commitment would not make aid more effective it would simply deny vital assistance to millions of poor and vulnerable people throughout the world.
鈥淟ong-term development aid means that we can reduce the amount we have to spend on humanitarian emergencies and will help millions more children go to school and live to celebrate their 5th birthdays. The UK should retain its principled position as one of the global leaders for the world鈥檚 poorest children.鈥�
**Max Lawson
**Oxfam, Head of Policy
鈥淩eneging on our aid promises would deprive millions of the world鈥檚 poorest people of life saving medicines, clean water and the chance to go to school.
鈥淭he Committee is guilty of presenting a false choice between delivering high quality aid and increasing its quantity - the Government can and should do both.
鈥淢inisters deserve real credit for keeping our commitments to the poorest during these tough times - it is one of the things that allows Britain to hold our head high on the world stage.鈥�
Justin Forsyth
Save the Children, Chief Executive
鈥淐utting UK aid will cost lives, threatening 1.4 million children and 50,000 mothers.
鈥淯K aid works. It is part of our DNA as a country and it is in our interest.
鈥淭he Lords Committee is wrong to call for the UK to break its solemn promise to the world鈥檚 poor.鈥�
Adrian Lovett
ONE Campaign, Europe Executive Director
鈥淭he Lords Committee has chosen to ignore the evidence of the impact UK aid will have. If we maintain our commitment to the 0.7% aid target, as the Chancellor and Prime Minister have promised to do, British aid will provide over 80 million children with vaccines against life-threatening diseases, saving an estimated 1.4 million lives.
鈥淚t is absolutely right that aid programmes must be as smart and effective as possible, but it is simply wrong for the committee to suggest that the 0.7% target will result in a lack of focus on effectiveness and value for money.
鈥淒FID has made a lot of progress in reducing corruption, improving transparency and accountability, and ensuring better outcomes. It also has a clear plan for how it will use 0.7% to help the poorest people in the world.鈥�
Barbara Frost
WaterAid, Chief Executive
鈥淭hanks to international aid and development efforts over the last two decades 2 billion more people now have access to life saving safe water. By meeting our international commitment to spend 0.7% of our national income on aid Britain can rightly lead from the front to champion getting water to 783 million who are still waiting for it.
鈥淭his would be a landmark achievement in human history and it is just as much in Britain鈥檚 interests to be in the forefront of this effort as it was to lead the campaign to abolition of slavery.
鈥淭he Department for International Development has some of the most rigorous and transparent checks in place anywhere in the world as to how UK aid is spent, including setting up Independent Commission for Aid Impact. The Secretary of State Andrew Mitchell has been a relentless champion for making sure taxpayers money spent on aid represents real value for money and generates real improvements in the lives of the poorest people around the world.鈥�
Eric Gutierrez
Christian Aid, Senior Governance Adviser
鈥淭he UK has long been seen as a leader in international development, and maintaining the pledge to deliver on the 0.7% target, which all major parties have signed up to, will enhance our ability to lead on broader questions of international development policy by joining the group of countries that meet the 0.7% threshold.
鈥淚n Scandinavian countries, where the 0.7% threshold has been achieved, the discussion has shifted away from how much to give, to focus instead on how well it could be used.
鈥淭he Committee also failed to understand that money spent in aid on development projects now can help minimise the amount spent on humanitarian aid in future. It is estimated that for every 拢1 spent on preventing disasters, 拢4 is saved in responding to them.
David Thomson
World Vision UK, Director of Policy
鈥淭he Lords are simply wrong to call for the Government to drop this commitment. Aid is a matter of life and death for millions of people living in poverty and we are calling on the Government to stand by their promise and not be blown off course by this.
鈥淣obody wants to see life-saving money wasted which is why we and other NGOs work so closely with the Government to ensure value for money and results for people in poverty.
鈥淏ut the two go hand in hand. Driving to raise standards without investing the money will mean that many more people will needlessly suffer.鈥�
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David Bull
UNICEF UK, Executive Director
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 break a promise you make to a child. Over the past 20 years development aid has meant that 4 million fewer children will die this year, 33 million children have had the chance to go to school for the first time and 4 million more people have access to live saving drugs for HIV/AIDS.
鈥淭here is no greater example of the effectiveness of long-term aid than the fact we could eradicate Polio within the next five years. We have three years left to meet the Millennium Development Goals.听 Now is not the time to turn our backs on children who need our help the most. We call on the Government to keep it鈥檚 commitment to the 0.7% aid spending target.鈥�
Marg Mayne
VSO, Chief Executive
鈥淲e welcome the Committee鈥檚 recognition that funding for international development has made a real and lasting impact. For years, VSO volunteers have seen the difference it makes in the poorest parts of the world. Millions of people have been lifted out of poverty.
鈥淲ith Governments around the world failing to meet the 0.7% target, it is vital that the UK sticks to its commitment and sends a strong message to the international community that cutting support to the world鈥檚 poorest people is unacceptable.
鈥淭he UK has always been a champion internationally for ensuring high quality aid that delivers real results. The recent establishment of the Independent Commission for Aid Impact, and the scrutiny it brings to the Department for International Development鈥檚 work, is just another example of this.鈥�
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Dominic Haslam
SightSavers, Director of Policy
鈥淭he UK鈥檚 aid programme has a long history of supporting poorer countries to lift their people out of poverty. DFID has already proven that it is able to scale up its investments whilst leading the world in terms of aid effectiveness and it should be allowed to continue to do so.
听
鈥淚t鈥檚 also disappointing to hear that the committee is recommending the Government break its commitment to spend 0.7% of GNI on aid. Aid helps to ensure that the world鈥檚 most disadvantaged people, including those who are disabled, are able to access health, education and other essential services to help them build a brighter future. Spending this small percentage on development is a pledge we have made and one we can afford to keep.鈥�
**听
Jamie Cooper-Hohn
Children鈥檚 Investment Fund Foundation, President and CEO
From the Children鈥檚 Investment Fund Foundation鈥檚 (CIFF鈥檚) experience, working in the development sphere offers exceptional cost effective impact and potential for transformational change at scale. We have further developed conviction that ensuring health and education benefits, as DFID is so effectively doing, is central to achieving global security and fostering the new markets that ultimately enable economic growth in developing markets as well as at home.
The UK Government through DFID has embraced the conditions for high value investing鈥搕houghtful targeting of resources, clear and effective accountability, transparency, and willingness to engage with partners who can bring the greatest impact and efficiencies to the delivery of overseas aid including, increasingly, the private sector. They have been leaders in raising the bar for the development community at large. CIFF supports and recognises their international leadership on this front and view this as a vital and highly leveraged path to ensuring both progress in the development sphere and reaping the broader benefits of security and economic growth we seek at home.
The results we鈥檙e achieving
Find out how Britain鈥檚 aid programme is changing lives:
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