Speech

Justine Greening: beyond aid - development priorities from 2015

Speech by the International Development Secretary at Standard Chartered in London on the focus of the UN's new poverty goals, due to be launched in 2015.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government
The Rt Hon Justine Greening

Thank you for that introduction. And thank you to our hosts Standard Chartered and Omidyar Network.

Both of your organisations do fantastic work spreading opportunity, investing in entrepreneurship and driving sustainable growth across the developing world. I know Standard Chartered also support some really valuable community investment programmes鈥ackling blindness, raising awareness of HIV/AIDS and educating and empowering adolescent girls.

And DFID continues to work alongside Omidyar Network on a range of global transparency initiatives鈥n particular exploiting the power of Open Data to shine a spotlight on the facts that bring power closer to the people.

And it鈥檚 a pleasure to be here today with so many representatives from the world of business, NGOs, open society groups, governments鈥ho are key development players.

I wanted to bring all of you together at a really important moment for shaping the future of development.

Most of you will be aware of the Millennium Development Goals鈥ight global goals to fight poverty鈥greed by countries and leading development institutions at the UN Millennium Summit in 2000. These goals have played a critical role in the fight against poverty鈥eally galvanising the international community around some clear and inspiring commitments鈥alting the spread of HIV/AIDS鈥roviding universal primary education鈥alving the number of people going hungry.

The 2015 deadline for achieving these goals is now fast approaching and over the next 14 months the world will negotiate a new set of global development goals鈥o take us to 2030. And there is a strong expectation that at the heart of these goals will be a commitment to end poverty for good, for everyone, everywhere.

But of course this is not going to be easy. There will still be 900million people living in extreme poverty in 2015. They will be some of the most marginalised, most vulnerable people on the planet鈥he most difficult to reach. Many of them will be girls and women.

Beyond aid

Last year global development aid reached the highest level ever recorded鈥he UK is plays a major part in this, contributing 0.7% of our national income to development. But the truth is that lifting almost a billion people out of chronic poverty will cost far more than the global development budget can provide.

I don鈥檛 think this means that we should scale back on our ambition, far from it.

And I鈥檓 going to argue today that to defeat poverty we need to go beyond aid鈥�.beyond the kind of aid we thought of a decade ago when the MDGs were agreed.

Building schools, vaccinating children, better sanitation鈥his kind of traditional aid will continue to be absolutely fundamental to development work and we will keep doing it.

But it鈥檚 not the whole answer to getting a country on a sustainable path out of poverty鈥nd ultimately ending their reliance on aid.

In fact I believe if you only focus on health, education, sanitation鈥t can mean you end up looking at the problem the wrong way round. We鈥檝e identified some of the critical services that we have in developed countries and tried to replicate them in developing countries鈥ut perhaps without a deep understanding of the institutions that were the catalysts for their existence.

As economists like Amartya Sen, and Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson have explained, institutions matter.

Our Prime Minister talks about the Golden Thread of Development: the building blocks that help societies, economies, and countries develop.

Building blocks like peaceful societies, accountable and transparent governance, the rule of law including property rights, an independent judiciary, free and fair trade and inclusive access to markets.

In other words the rules, written and unwritten, that mean society works fairly and consistently for everyone.

And you don鈥檛 need to be a development expert to instinctively understand why these things really matter. The public debate around aid often centres around the fear that the aid we give can鈥檛 do any lasting good if institutions aren鈥檛 serving the people鈥f girls and women are being oppressed, if justice isn鈥檛 available, if corruption is rife, if markets don鈥檛 function and business opportunities and jobs are restricted to the few and denied to the many.

That鈥檚 why right now the UK is pressing hard for these issues to be reflected in the next generation of global development goals.

Many of you will be aware that we have already played a critical part in the early stages of developing these goals. Our Prime Minister along with the Presidents of Indonesia and Liberia, was part of a panel that made recommendations on the post-2015 goals to the UN Secretary General last year.

But we know when it comes to deciding the final goals鈥here is no guarantee that we鈥檒l get a consensus on critical issues like peace, justice and jobs. In fact it鈥檚 going to be an uphill battle.

So today I want to set out very clearly why the UK will keep pressing, lobbying and negotiating for a clear, inspiring and ambitious set of development goals that will leave no one behind in the fight against poverty鈥nd why we need everyone鈥usinesses, NGOs, open society groups鈥o champion these issues too.

Great British institutions

There鈥檚 no better place to explain to you why this agenda matters so much鈥han here in the heart of the City of London.

From this very building Standard Chartered provide banking and financial services all over the world. Not far from here you鈥檒l find the Bank of England, the London Stock Exchange鈥 little further west the Royal Courts of Justice.

All around us鈥ritain鈥檚 great institutions. Institutions many of us take for granted and yet we rely on them implicitly when we buy a house, open a bank account, set up a business, enter into any kind of contract.

Britain鈥檚 great institutions鈥rom the rule of law to parliamentary democracy to open markets鈥ere fundamental to Britain鈥檚 development鈥ithout them the innovation and entrepreneurship that made our country great could never have flourished.

And of course these institutions have evolved over time鈥�

Next year we celebrate the 800 year anniversary of the Magna Carta鈥he Great Charter of the Liberties of England鈥hat was forced on King John by his barons.

And we look on this document as a historic moment鈥ot because our country changed overnight鈥n the contrary successive monarchs were soon busy trying to row back their powers鈥ut a powerful idea was established鈥 vital guiding principle that we were all subject to the common law, not the whims of the powerful.

Ultimately there isn鈥檛 a blueprint for bringing about institutional change in other countries. Change happens in different ways, in different countries.

But if you can get certain institutions in place developing countries can get further, faster.

Peace, jobs and justice

I know that for many people these things sound good in theory鈥ut they question what we can do in practice.

I believe there are three strands to it鈥elivering peace, jobs and justice.

Firstly, peace and stability is the foundation for development in all countries.

Time and again we find that conflict and violence directly correlate with the most extreme and intractable poverty levels.

It not only ruins people鈥檚 lives in the short term, but stops individuals and businesses from investing. The very thing a country needs if it is going to break out of poverty in the long-term.

That鈥檚 why having an explicit intention of creating peaceful and stable states must be a priority for the international community.

The UK is investing in building and maintaining peace鈥s well as helping fragile states to avert the risks of spiraling into repeated cycles of violence.

For example in Bangladesh, we are supporting improved police and justice services鈥ncluding providing access to community legal services for more than 3 million women.

We鈥檙e also increasingly focused on building growth and jobs. Economic growth has been the driving force behind the reduction in poverty over the last few decades. But to lift everyone out of poverty we need growth to accelerate faster鈥nd it needs to be inclusive, sustainable growth that creates jobs and livelihoods.

This hinges on building open economies鈥here entrepreneurship and innovation are allowed to flourish鈥here investors can get capital to invest鈥nd where there are economic opportunities for all.

So DFID is focused on making the operating environment for businesses simpler, fairer and more transparent

In Bangladesh we have helped to cut the number of days it takes to register a business down from 57 days鈥o just 3 days鈥ontributing to nearly 30,000 new businesses being registered.

In Somalia DFID has helped establish four 鈥榦ne stop business centres鈥�, which have helped to reduce compliance fees from $2,800 to $300 for local businesses.

And we recognise that open economies are reinforced by open societies鈥�.in which individual rights to liberty and property are safeguarded鈥n short: justice. Again getting these elements in place also represents a green light to companies thinking about investing in emerging and frontier economies. They need a level playing field so that companies who play fair can win.

A good example of this is land and property rights.

A key constraint to investment in Africa is insecure land tenure and property rights. 90% of Africa鈥檚 land is estimated to have insecure tenure or contested land rights鈥t鈥檚 hard to imagine鈥ould anyone here be buying a house if you couldn鈥檛 check to see who owned the freehold?

We are strengthening land and property rights for the poorest, particularly for women and girls.

For example in Rwanda, DFID has supported 3 million people, half of them women, to gain formal rights to their land.

And peace, jobs and justice, is not just getting the right structures or laws in place鈥t鈥檚 about supporting people鈥nsuring local people have the necessary skills and expertise鈥hat鈥檚 in part about institutions too.

In Britain we have a wealth of expertise to share鈥uilt up from the days when our guilds of mercers, goldsmiths and ironmongers were ruling the City of London from down the road at Guildhall鈥riving up standards and ensuring reliable quality. And I鈥檓 determined to draft in the best of British expertise.

This year we鈥檝e supported experts from the Institute of Chartered Accountants to assist the Zambian authorities to strengthen business auditing. While experts from the Better Regulation Office have been working with officials in Nepal and Liberia to improve the efficiency of business inspection.

The UK has an unrivalled array of expertise, professionalism and talented legal practitioners within the country鈥檚 judicial and legal systems鈥nd many of them are providing their services 鈥榩ro-bono鈥� in the countries DFID works in.

I want DFID to be working much more closely with the legal sector on this and today I am announcing a new DFID programme which will provide funding for DFID priority countries to access UK legal skills鈥o improve the policies, organisations and practices of legal and judicial systems in those countries.

In addition to this programme DFID is also investing 拢7million in the African Legal Support Facility鈥hich provides high quality commercial and pro-bono international legal advice to African governments and law firms.

Over the next three years, this investment will help African Governments to negotiate better oil, gas, mining and infrastructure deals. It will also provide training to local African law firms. 50% of ALSF contracts are currently won by UK firms鈥nd DFID will be working with UKTI and City UK to raise even greater awareness of ALSF contracts to UK firms.

Finally, we鈥檒l be scaling up DFID鈥檚 commercial legal programme LASER, which helps countries to strengthen their commercial environment, issues from commercial court reform to competition law implementation. Things which, done right, so often smooth the path of entrepreneurship.

A global agenda: tax, trade and transparency

So DFID has a growing number of programmes鈥ocused on delivering peace, jobs and justice, but this needs to be a global effort. When the Prime Minister talks about the Golden Thread he is talking about a Golden Thread that ties us all together鈥�.developing and developed countries getting their house in order.

That鈥檚 why at the UK鈥檚 G8 Presidency at Loch Erne last year the Prime Minister championed three key issues: tax, trade and transparency鈥�

We need stronger international standards on tax to allow countries to collect what is due to them.

At the G8 we made progress on new international rules to stop companies from artificially shifting their profits across borders to avoid taxes.

We also need freer trade because trade barriers and bureaucracy are preventing people selling their goods at a fair price. In December last year, the World Trade Organization delivered the first global trade deal in a generation鈥 momentous agreement which could add 拢70billion to the world economy each year鈥ncluding 拢7bllion for sub-Saharan Africa and 拢1billion for the UK.

Finally we need to promote greater transparency globally鈥n particular when it comes to extractives鈥nding, once and for all, the scandal of the looted billions of pounds from countries that are rich in oil, gas and minerals.

Today I am announcing a new 拢34million programme to increase the transparency and accountability around the extractives industry鈥n resource-rich countries, including Tanzania, Nigeria, Burma and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

This programme will ensure citizens, the media and investors can see exactly what revenues governments are receiving from extractives resources鈥nd where this money is being spent. We鈥檒l also be helping to develop new technology so citizens can easily access user-friendly data on extractives.

We know transparency exposes inefficiency and corruption鈥his programme will allow citizens to really hold their governments to account and ensure extractives resources are invested in areas that promote wider economic development and jobs for everyone.

And this investment stands alongside new EU rules that will mean citizens can see company-by-company, project-by-project reporting of payments鈥ot just nationally aggregated data. The UK will be introducing regulation on this in 2014鈥�

This is all important for ensuring natural resources in developing countries are benefiting the many鈥nstead of lining the pockets of the few.

Conclusion: Call to action on post 2015

All of what I鈥檝e been outlining is progress鈥ut there is a need to move not only further but faster. This is in all of our interests鈥elping other countries to grow and develop and to become our trading partners鈥eans a better, more prosperous future for Britain too.

As I said at the beginning we now have a historic opportunity to make these issues count in the next set of global development goals.

Negotiations on this will formally start in January next year鈥ith a view to new goals and targets being launched in September 2015鈥ubject to us getting unanimity from UN member states. But the lobbying starts now.

The UK wants a simple, clear and inspiring set of goals and targets that centre on eradicating poverty. We believe this needs to include the missing issues from the MDGs: economic growth, governance, rule of law, tackling corruption, peace and stability, and putting women and girls first.

We know the argument is far from won in the UN. There is broad agreement about the need to tackle extreme poverty鈥ut a lack of consensus about how we tackle the root causes of poverty.

Everyone here has a chance to influence, to champion key issues, to help build an international consensus.

It鈥檚 crucial that this is not just a traditional debate between public donors and recipients.

And I, we really need businesses to make a case too. I believe it鈥檚 in your own self-interest. Smart businesses know it鈥檚 best to get into the world鈥檚 emerging and frontier markets today rather than start late in a crowded market tomorrow. In ten years, the number of middle-class African consumers has increased by 60% to 313 million. African consumer spending could reach $1.4 trillion by 2020.

Delivering peace, jobs and justice鈥his isn鈥檛 simply about corporate responsibility鈥hese things are fundamental to having business models that can do successful, long-term business in the world鈥檚 current frontier economies that are tomorrow鈥檚 major economies over the next 20 years.

So I urge you to press the governments in all the countries where you do business鈥ake the case for putting governance, rule of law, justice and property rights at the heart of the new goals鈥xplain why these things represent a green light to you as an investor鈥our voices are those that can speak the most credibly on this.

I know that several businesses, led by Unilever, are working on a manifesto for business to feed into the post 2015 negotiations. Other groups, such as the Business Action for Africa, whose members include De Beers, Standard Chartered and Shell are also thinking through their priorities. I urge other businesses, of all sizes, to get involved.

I鈥檓 delighted that the UN Global Compact is represented among the panel tonight as the formal channel for feeding in views.

I also want to urge NGOs to work closely with open society groups who are already championing these issues.

For those of you who see the risks of irresponsible investment then help us, help us create the level playing field that will crowd out the irresponsible money by letting the good money really compete.

We know that the poorest people on the world aren鈥檛 just going hungry鈥hey want justice, they want a voice, they want jobs, they want to own their own land and grow their own businesses.

You have a real opportunity to articulate a strong and united civil society voice in support of peace, jobs and justice.

Together we can build more peaceful, more prosperous, more open, more successful societies and economies. There is no room for complacency鈥 post-2015 development framework without peace, jobs and justice at its heart will see the development engine stuck in first gear as the time it needs to shift up.

But there is a clear opportunity to help build a better future for developing countries, and for all of us鈥 historic opportunity that together we must seize.

Updates to this page

Published 7 July 2014