Why “beyond aid” matters

This blog post by Owen Barder and Theo Talbot first appeared on Views from the Center.

The UK House of Commons International Development Committee is undertaking a very interesting inquiry which happens to be right up our street. It is examining

what might come next in the UK’s approach to development, including the coherence of policies which affect development, and the impact of the UKs non-aid policies on developing countries and … the underlying government mechanisms needed to support any changes.

We have submitted written evidence for the Committee to consider for this inquiry. In the first of three memoranda, “Why Beyond Aid Matters” (PDF), we explain why we appreciate so much the IDC’s decision to focus on these issues, which are the focus of CGD’s Commitment to Development Index. We think these “beyond aid” policies are important for three reasons:

  1. The benefits to poor people that can be brought about by even quite modest “beyond aid” policy changes are likely to be much larger than can be brought about through aid alone.
  2. “Beyond aid” policies mainly address the underlying causes of poverty, while aid often addresses the symptoms of poverty and meets immediate humanitarian needs.
  3. As well as being beneficial for development, most of these “beyond aid” policies would be good for the UK in the short run as well as in the long run. Aid, in contrast, costs the average British household about £428 (about $700) a year: so the long-run benefits come at a substantial short-term cost.

Take trade, for example. Greater market access for exports from poor countries increases the economic returns to starting or growing a business in a developing country and can thereby result in significant economic and development impact. A recent study of the possible impact of the “Doha Round” trade negotiations estimated that real income gains to low- and lower-middle- income countries from lower trade barriers in rich countries would be between $42 billion to $62 billion a year. Liberalizing trade can generate growth even in economies that are usually assumed to to be held back by constraints like lack of access to credit or poor infrastructure. In 2000, the US Congress signed the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), which provides duty-free access for selected countries to US market. It has been estimated to have increased exports from eligible African countries by $360 million a year.

Many changes to non-aid policies deliver mutual gains – opening our markets to exports from the developing world gives consumers access to cheaper and more varied goods while also benefiting firms in those countries, the employees those firms hired, and the governments to which they paid more in taxes. Trade liberalization is a good example of a policy which could have a very large impact on people in the developing world, tackle the causes and not just the symptoms of poverty, and also benefit the UK.

Overall, these kinds of non-aid policies, ranging from migration to trade, evaluated by CGD’s Commitment to Development Index (CDI) are a potentially very significant but vastly underused way for rich countries to improve poor people’s lives. We do not believe the simplistic slogan of “trade not aid” —  these policies are not substitutes for aid: they are complements.

Our first submission to the inquiry: “Why ‘Beyond Aid’ Matters” (PDF), sets this out in more detail. It gives examples of the development benefits that could be achieved through changes to rich countries’ policies studied by the CDI.  Do you have other good, evidence-based examples we should add to this list?

We will also soon publish our two other submissions. One looks at how the UK’s beyond aid policies measure up on CGD’s Commitment to Development Index, relative to its peers and how they have changed over time. The other offers an answer to the Committee’s rather pertinent question about whether DFID should remain a separate government department in the coming years.


4 responses to “Why “beyond aid” matters”

  1. Duncan Green avatar
    Duncan Green

    Hi Owen, here’s their creator, Lance Taylor on why you should be highly sceptical when free trade advocates use CGE models to generate big, but largely bogus, numbers on the alleged benefits of erasing borders. http://policy-practice.oxfam.org.uk/publications/modelling-the-impact-of-trade-liberalisation-a-critique-of-computable-general-e-112547

    1. Owen Barder avatar

      Duncan – for the record, I am not advocating free trade (at least, not here and now, though that is where my prejudices lie). I am advocating that rich countries should open their markets to goods and services from poor countries.

  2. Sam Gardner avatar

    Scrambling for the hills, ostracizing.

    The reason beyond aid is weak is the reason why aid is still necessary and poverty still exists.

    It is about power. The poor have none. Monopolists have power and access (see Tim Harford his excellent piece).

    Development people are invited with the ministry of trade and foreign affairs to be part of the trade agenda, to help to sell our products, not to give better access to our companies.

    The surprise when the development person shows up, and argues aid to help them come instead of help them stay there. Follow decent tender procedures instead of supporting blindly our companies.

    What is the power of the development person in these meetings. Afghanistan learned us how little.

    The power is bigger in Parliament: the interest of the UK is big in a rule based world with good governance and fair trade. The interest of the individual companies listened to at embassies is very big.

    Integrating the agendas should happen where it counts: at the political level in Europe, not at the administrative level in the third world. Keep DFID separate.

  3. Tammy Corbett avatar

    The examples of ‘beyond aid’ policies on which greater effort should be made in the PDF especially promoting security really speaks to me. We should have a greater concern for human rights and do whatever we have to to protect those who cannot protect themselves.