UN “deeply troubled” by impending cuts on development aid by rich nations | Share The World’s Resources (STWR)

The four-month-old Russian invasion of Ukraine, which has triggered a hefty increase in military spending among Western nations and a rise in humanitarian and military assistance to the beleaguered country, is now threatening to undermine the flow of Official Development Assistance (ODA) to the worldโ€™s poorer nations.

In an advance warning of the upcoming cuts, the UNโ€™s Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed told a recent meeting of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC): โ€œAs Chair of the United Nations Sustainable Development Group, I am deeply troubled over recent decisions and proposals to markedly cut Official Development Assistance (ODA) to service the impacts of the war in Ukraine on refugeesโ€.ย 

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who was equally concerned about the impending reductions, has urged donor nations to reconsider making cuts that will affect the worldโ€™s most vulnerable.ย 

The people who benefit from the work of the UN system need additional and more predictable funding, he added. โ€œContributions to key UN agencies, funds and programmes, working with people on the ground, are facing steep proposed reductions. Cuts to development and the United Nations mean scaling back support at a time when demand for support to meet the deepening development needs has reached an all-time highโ€.ย 

He said ODA is more necessary than ever, and called upon all countries to demonstrate solidarity, invest in resilience, and prevent the current crisis from escalating further.

According to a UN report, titledย 2022 Financing for Sustainable Development Report: Bridging the Finance Dividereleased last April, โ€œthe fallout from the crisis in Ukraine, with increased spending on refugees in Europe, may mean cuts to the aid provided to the poorest countriesโ€

At a meeting in mid-May, the Group of Seven โ€“ comprising some of worldโ€™s biggest economies โ€” Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, UK and the US, plus the European Unionโ€“ agreed to provide nearly $20 billion to support Ukraine and bolster its war-ravaged economy.

Separately the US has pledged over $40 billion in economic, humanitarian and military assistance to Ukraine since the Russian invasion last February.ย 

The widespread fear is that the collective $60 billion assistance to Ukraine may result in corresponding reductions in ODA.

Bhumika Muchhala, senior advocate on global economic governance at the Third World Network, told IPS cuts to ODA at a time of a convergence of crises in the Global South is extremely concerning.ย 

She said the pandemic is still ongoing, and health and economic recovery need immediate funds. Food security is being threatened by global supply disruptions, exacerbated by the war in Ukraine, creating urgent crises of malnutrition, hunger and even famine.ย 

She also pointed out that climate change is creating catastrophes every day, from fatal heat waves to floods and droughts, while both existing climate financing as well as ODA commitments still remain unfulfilled by rich countries.ย 

โ€œUnderpinning these crises is the surge in gender inequality, as women absorb the shocks and costs of global inequalitiesโ€.ย 

โ€œMaking matters worse, a large number of developing countries are in debt distress or experiencing debt crisis, leading to another era of austerity that is already arresting the achievement of SDGs, resulting in a retrogression of poverty reduction that has taken many decades of hard-won economic and social development to achieveโ€. said Muchhala.ย 

In light of the fact that every crisis in the South will ripple through the world economy with adverse effects for all, โ€œrich countries have a collective duty to fulfill existing ODA commitments, as well as climate financing commitments and efforts to create genuine fiscal space for developing countries through equitable debt restructuring, international tax cooperation to eradicate illicit financial flows, and needs-based issuances of Special Drawing Rights,โ€ she declared.

The Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), comprising some of the worldโ€™s richest nations, has been providing development assistance since the 1960s.

According to OECD, ODA is defined as โ€œgovernment aid that promotes and specifically targets the economic development and welfare of developing countriesโ€.ย 

The DAC adopted ODA as the โ€œgold standardโ€ of foreign aid in 1969 and it remains the main source of financing for development aid.

The April UN report,ย 2022 Financing for Sustainable Development Report: Bridging the Finance Divide, said record growth ofย Official Development Assistance, increased to its highest level ever in 2020, rising to $161.2 billion.

โ€œYet, 13 countries cut ODA, and the sum remains insufficient for the vast needs of developing countriesโ€.

But according to OECD, ODA rose to an all-time high of $178.9 billion in 2021, up 4.4% in real terms from 2020 as developed countries stepped up to help developing countries grappling with the COVID-19 crisis, according to the latest available figures.

This figure included $ 6.3 billion spent on providing COVID-19 vaccines to developing countries, equivalent to 3.5% of total ODA. Excluding ODA for donated COVID-19 vaccines, ODA was up 0.6% in real terms from 2020.

The 2021 ODA total is equivalent to 0.33% of DAC donorsโ€™ combined gross national income (GNI) and still below the UN target of 0.7% ODA to GNI.

The beneficiaries of ODA include the UNโ€™s 46 least developed countries (LDCs), described as the poorest of the worldโ€™s poor.ย ย https://unctad.org/topic/least-developed-countries/list

Meanwhile, in a new report released May 24, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) warned of the direct and indirect impacts of the war in Ukraine on the African continent, which could further stall the continentโ€™s development trajectory already significantly jeopardized by the COVID-19 crisis.ย 

This report, entitled โ€œThe Impact of the War in Ukraine on Sustainable Development in Africaโ€, reinforcesย findings of the Global Crisis Response Group (GCRG)ย that the war in Ukraine is pushing the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals and the aspirations of the African Unionโ€™s Agenda 2063 further out of reach, and provides key recommendations for actions that need to be taken immediately, to avert further crises in Africa.ย 

โ€œAfrica is facing a double crisis with the combined effects of the war in Ukraine and of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, with strategic partnerships, the crisis also presented the opportunity to rechart Africaโ€™s development trajectory, breaking away from a dependency cycleโ€ said Achim Steiner, Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and UNDP Administrator.ย 

โ€œNow is a critical time for action. It is time to intensify efforts and reframe development finance, strengthen resilience in African economies, and foster economic transformation as a key driver for change in Africa.โ€ย 

According to the report, some of the direct impacts of the crisis in Africa include trade disruption, food and fuel price spikes, macroeconomic instability, and security challenges. African countries are particularly affected due to their heavy reliance on imports from Russia and Ukraine.ย 

The current hike in prices for food and fuel directly affects the entire continent, including the biggest economies, as food and fuel account for over one-third of the consumer price index in most African countries, (Nigeria 57 per cent, Egypt 60 per cent, Ghana 54 per cent, and Cameroon 42 per cent).ย 

In 2020, African countries imported $4.0 billion worth of agricultural products from Russia, 90 per cent of which was wheat.

Daniel D. Bradlow, SARCHI Professor of International Development Law and African Economic Relations at the University of Pretoria told IPS: โ€œI think the UNDP statement gives a good summary of the situationโ€.

โ€œThe impact of the war in Ukraine is having a devastating impact on Africa. If it continues it is likely to lead to hunger, increased poverty and serious debt crises across the continent,โ€ he added.ย 

โ€œIf the Western countries really wanted African support for the war in Ukraine, they should have taken steps to shield Africa and other parts of the Global South from the impacts of a European war. Instead, they are redirecting aid that could have gone to Africa to Ukraine and are cutting their aid budgetsโ€.ย 

He pointed out that the support that is being offered through the IFIs and others are likely to be in the form of loans rather than grants.ย 

โ€œThis means that at the end of the day, the Western states are making African states pay for a conflict in Europe that suits their political agendas.โ€

In a statement last April, Jeroen Kwakkenbos, EU aid expert at Oxfam said donors have thrown out the rule book by counting vaccine donations in aid budgets.ย 

โ€œOver 350 million vaccine doses came from hoarded stocks, some of which, were donated far too close to their expiry date. Many more were donated without essential equipment such as syringes making them almost useless. Including these โ€˜donationsโ€™ in aid budgets inflates aid. It is merely donors patting themselves on the back for a job that may have cost lives,โ€ he noted

โ€œThe war in Ukraine poses a risk to future aid budgets. Aid is already being pulled from countries like Syria to fund the reception of Ukrainian refugees in Europe.โ€

โ€œWe are left with the bizarre situation where European countries could become the largest recipients of their own aid. Instead of cherry-picking humanitarian crises, donor governments need to boost aid budgets to meet the challenges of today.โ€ย 

IPS UN Bureau Report

Original source: IPS

Image credit: Christopher Edralin, Expo 2020 Dubai

This content was originally published here.

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