Chapter 1
Introduction
Referral of inquiry and terms of reference
1.1
On 9 December 2013, the Senate referred matters relating to
Australia's overseas aid and development assistance program to the Foreign
Affairs, Defence and Trade References Committee for inquiry and report by
20 March 2014.[1]
The reporting date for the inquiry was subsequently extended by the Senate to
27 March 2014.[2]
1.2
The terms of reference for the inquiry are as follows:
Australia's overseas aid and
development assistance program in light of the Government's $4.5 billion cut to
international development assistance, with particular reference to:
-
Australia's ability to deliver aid against stated policy objectives and
international commitments;
-
Australia's ability to maintain its international development
priorities, including sectoral, regional, bilateral and multilateral
international relationships;
-
the integration of AusAID into the Department of Foreign Affairs and
Trade and the freeze in international development assistance funding;
-
any unintended consequences of these changes; and
-
any other related matters.
Conduct of inquiry
1.3
The committee advertised its inquiry on its website, and in The
Australian, calling for submissions to be lodged by 7 February 2014. The
committee also wrote directly to a range of people and organisations likely to
have an interest in matters covered by the terms of reference, drawing their
attention to the inquiry and inviting them to make written submissions.
1.4
The committee received 73 submissions to the inquiry, one of which was
accepted as a confidential submission. Submissions are listed at Appendix 1
and public submissions are available on the committee's website at: www.aph.gov.au/senate_fadt.
1.5
On 21 February 2014, the committee held a public hearing for the inquiry
at the State Library of New South Wales in Sydney. A list of the witnesses who
appeared at the hearing is at Appendix 2, and the Hansard
transcript is also available through the committee's website. Additional
information and answers to questions on notice received during the inquiry are
listed in Appendix 3.
Structure of the report
1.6
The committee's report is structured as follows:
-
Chapter 1 provides a background to the inquiry and summarises
key features of Australia's overseas aid and development assistance
program and recent events;
-
Chapter 2 deals with the policy objectives of Australia's
overseas aid program and international commitments in relation to aid;
-
Chapter 3 addresses the issue of the development priorities and
delivery of Australia's overseas aid program;
-
Chapter 4 deals with the integration of the Australian Agency for
International Development (AusAID) into the Department of Foreign Affairs and
Trade (DFAT) as well as the effectiveness of aid and benchmarking;
-
Chapter 5 includes consideration of the cuts to funding for
overseas aid and the consequences of recently announced cuts; and
-
Chapter 6 summarises the committee's views and recommendations.
Background
1.7
The origins of Australia's aid program can be traced to Australia's
membership of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s
(OECD's) Development Assistance Committee (DAC) in 1966.[3]
The predecessor to AusAID, the Office of the Australian Development Assistance
Agency, was originally established within DFAT by the Whitlam government in
1974. In 2010, the agency, now known as the AusAID, was an administratively
autonomous executive agency within the foreign affairs and trade portfolio.
While the agency has usually reported to the Minister for Foreign Affairs, a
Minister for International Development was appointed.
1.8
AusAID previously managed about 84 per cent of Australia's aid program
with the remainder delivered through other Australian Government departments
and agencies.[4]
In 2012-13 the Australian Government provided an estimated $5,149 million in
total overseas development assistance (ODA) of which $4,314 million was managed
by AusAID, including an estimated $195 million delivered by other government
agencies on behalf of AusAID. This ODA was estimated to be equal to around 0.35
per cent of gross national income (GNI).[5]
1.9
Australia's overseas aid program supports progress in developing
countries multilaterally, regionally, bilaterally and in a range of specific
sectors, with a geographic focus on the Asia Pacific. More than 80 per cent of
Australia's ODA is directed to its nearest neighbours in the Asia Pacific region.
In particular, as the two largest beneficiaries of Australian support,
Indonesia received $448.5 million and Papua New Guinea (PNG) received $484.7
million in bilateral aid from Australia in 2012-13.[6]
1.10
In 2005, then Foreign Minister, the Hon Alexander Downer MP,
commissioned a white paper on Australian aid to provide a strategic framework
to guide the direction and delivery of Australia's overseas aid program over
the next decade.[7]
Following from the white paper, an Office of Development Effectiveness (ODE)
was established in 2006. The ODE is an operationally independent unit that evaluates
the quality and effectiveness of the Australian aid program and contributes to
international evidence and debate about aid and development effectiveness.[8]
1.11
The key feature of Australia's aid program in recent years has been its
rapid growth. In September 2005, the former Howard Government announced plans
to double the aid program by 2010 to $4 billion. By 2010-11, the Australian aid
budget was approximately $4.3 billion, or 0.33 per cent of GNI. Before the 2007
election, the Australian Labor Party committed to increase Australia's overseas
aid to 0.5 per cent of GNI by 2015. The commitment gained bipartisan support.[9]
1.12
The Rudd Government commissioned the first independent review of
Australia's aid program since 1996 in 2010. In April 2011, the Independent
Review of Aid Effectiveness (Independent Review) delivered its report to the
Australian Government. The Independent Review described Australia's aid program
as 'improvable but good' and noted that the rapid growth of Australia's aid
program in the previous five years had created 'administrative stress'.[10]
It also made a number of findings regarding areas where there could be improved
practice. These included that Australia's aid program was fragmented, lacked a
clear and comprehensive overall strategy and that development ineffectiveness
was a key risk.[11]
The Independent Review made 39 recommendations to further improve the program,
almost all of which were agreed or agreed in principle by the Australian
Government.[12]
1.13
Key recommendations of the Independent Review included:
Recommendation 2 - Decisions about country allocations should
be based on poverty, national interest, capacity to make a difference and
current scale and effectiveness. Decisions about country programs should also
reflect the need to consolidate the aid program.
Recommendation 5 - Australia should join the African
Development Bank.
Recommendation 11 - Promoting gender equality should be a
critical cross–cutting objective for the aid program. Australia should be a
firm and persistent advocate and practical supporter of gender equality,
especially in the Pacific.
Recommendation 12 - Humanitarian and emergency assistance
should be increased as a share of the program.
Recommendation 15 - Core funding to multilateral
organisations and NGOs should be significantly increased as a share of total
spending. Core funding increases should be made on a case-by-case basis, linked
to effectiveness, capacity and relevance.
Recommendation 16 - AusAID should devote greater senior
management resources to developing and managing relationships with key
partners. Predictable, multi-year funding of partners should be provided and
micromanagement avoided.
Recommendation 23 - There should be more aid funding for
research by Australian and international institutions, particularly in
agriculture and medicine.
Recommendation 24 - The government should develop and
implement a Cabinet-endorsed Four-Year Strategy for the entire aid program for
policy and funding clarity.
Recommendation 26 - The budget process should be reformed to
provide greater funding certainty, including allocating funds on the basis of
the Four-Year Strategy and its annual updates, not through [new policy
proposals], as at present.
Recommendation 37 - A Transparency Charter should be
developed, committing the aid program to publishing documents and data in a way
that is comprehensive, accessible and timely.
Recommendation 39 - The scale-up of the aid program to 0.5
per cent of GNI should be subject to the progressive achievement of
predetermined hurdles. [13]
1.14
In particular, the Australian Government agreed in principle that in
scaling up the aid program, 'country allocations and programs should be
adjusted in line with the Review Panel's specific recommendations':
Geographic allocations will be based on an assessment of poverty,
national interest, capacity to make a difference, and current scale and effectiveness.
In line with the Government's commitment to deliver 0.5 of
GNI on overseas aid by 2015–16, agree in principle that:
- aid to Pacific island countries, South East Asia, Afghanistan and
Pakistan, and Africa and the Middle East be increased
- bilateral aid to China and India be phased out with future assistance to
be delivered through regional and global programs
- any future increase in aid to Latin America and the Caribbean be modest,
with any increases to be delivered through regional and global programs.[14]
1.15
In May 2012, a new policy framework was established: Helping the
World’s Poor through Effective Aid: Australia's Comprehensive Aid Policy
Framework 2015-2016 (CAPF). This provided a four year pathway to
establishing where and how Australia's aid would be spent, the expected results
and the measures being taken to ensure effective delivery. It included a
commitment to review results annually and address areas needing improvement. The
ODE was charged with responsibility for developing benchmarks for measuring the
effectiveness of Australian efforts. The first Annual Report on Aid
Effectiveness 2011-12 found that Australian aid was enhancing regional
prosperity, reducing poverty rates and delivering cost-effective services for
those in need.[15]
It also outlined processes to detect and prevent fraud to ensure that aid funds
were not misused.
1.16
The CAPF also established the Independent Evaluation Committee (IEC) as
an advisory body to strengthen the independence and credibility of the work of
the ODE. The terms of reference for the IEC state that it 'will oversee the
work program of ODE in planning, commissioning, managing and disseminating a
high quality independent evaluation program which produces technically sound
and policy relevant evaluations that contribute to improved aid effectiveness'.[16]
Recent events
1.17
The global financial crisis (as well as the euro zone crisis) has had an
ongoing impact on the levels of overseas aid provided by developed countries,
including Australia.[17]
In the previous government's 2008-09 budget, ODA was to increase to 0.5 per
cent of GNI by 2015-16. This was deferred in the 2012-13 budget to 2016-17 and
deferred again in the 2013-14 budget to 2017-18. The savings from the deferrals
of the 0.5 per cent target and slower growth of the aid program under the
former government totalled $5.7 billion.[18]
1.18
Prior to the 2013 federal election, the Coalition announced that it
supported the increase of Australia's aid program to 0.5 per cent of GNI, but
could not 'commit to a date given the current state of the federal budget'.[19]
The Coalition stated it would reduce aid by $4.5 billion in relation to Labor's
2013-14 budget and Labor's forward estimates for the next three years. This
reduction was to begin with a within-year budget cut of $656 million in
2013-14. Further, it would index future increases to the Consumer Price Index
(CPI) and would 're-prioritise foreign aid allocations towards Non-Government
Organisations that deliver on-the-ground support for those most in need'.[20]
1.19
Following the federal election, the new Prime Minister, the Hon Tony
Abbott MP, announced that AusAID would be integrated into DFAT 'enabling the
aid and diplomatic arms of Australia's international policy agenda to be more
closely aligned'.[21]
This machinery of government change had not been flagged prior to the election
and created confusion about the short- and long-term direction of Australia ODA
program.[22]
1.20
On 18 January 2014, the Foreign Minister, the Hon Julie Bishop MP,
announced that the 'Australian Government's annual aid budget for 2013/14 will
be $5.042 billion, refocused on reducing poverty in the Indo-Pacific region and
tied to rigorous benchmarks'.[23] This represents a
reduction of $650 million on 2013-14 budget allocations.[24]
Minister Bishop acknowledged that this was $107 million less than last year's
budget, but stated that 'the rapid growth in Australia's aid budget was neither
targeted nor sustainable'. She also noted that from 2014-15 Australia's aid
budget would grow each year in line with the CPI. Minister Bishop stated this
change would provide 'stability and future certainty to partner governments,
international organisations and non-government organisations'.[25]
1.21
The revised 2013-14 aid budget, released with the announcement,
indicated that these funding changes affected a range of countries, regions and
global programs. For example in the Pacific, while funding to PNG was the same
as 2012-13, aid funding to most other Pacific countries was cut. The total for
the Pacific region was reduced from $920.8 million in 2012-13 to $882 million
in 2013-14. In particular, the total for Africa and the Middle East was cut
from $329.2 million in 2012-13 to $199.8 million in 2013-14, with Bangladesh
receiving the most significant cut – from $84.8 million in 2012-13 to $61.6
million in 2013-14.[26]
1.22
While the total for cross regional programs grew from $292.9 million in
2012-13 to $309.1 million in the 2013-14 revised budget, specific programs
received reductions in funding. The Infrastructure & Rural Development cross
regional program was cut from $55.2 million in 2012-13 to $46.1 million. Governance
was cut from $27.2 million to $16.7 million. Climate Change & Environmental
Sustainability was cut from $17 million to $0.5 million. Disability &
Gender was cut from $29.0 million to $25.0 million.[27]
1.23
Some global programs also received substantial cuts in the revised
2013-14 aid budget compared to 2012-13. In particular, the Humanitarian and
Emergency Response program was cut from $163.3 million to $137.4 million. The
contribution to global environment programs was reduced from $74.6 million to
zero. Funding for Development Effectiveness and Research was also reduced from
$11.5 million to $10.3 million.[28]
1.24
However, the cuts announced by Minister Bishop were only placed in the
context of funding provided in 2012-13. Compared to the funding allocated for
2013-14 as at Budget most of these cuts were significantly larger and affected
almost every program in the aid budget. A more detailed comparison is extracted
at Appendix 4.
1.25
Following the announcement of the revised aid budget for 2013-14, a
number of Australian non-government organisations expressed their concerns
regarding the impact of the cuts on Australia's aid program and the lack of
detail regarding which programs will be affected.[29]
1.26
The cuts applied almost entirely to the part of the aid program that had
formerly been managed by AusAID, which in 2012-13 totalled approximately $3.9 billion
and at the time of the 2013-14 budget were set to increase to $4.6 billion.[30]
By allocating the cuts almost entirely to DFAT's appropriation the government
increased the required percentage reduction in 2013-14 from 12 per cent to 15
per cent. The refusal to apply cuts of about 12 percent to the balance of other
government departments' expenditure forced additional savings of around $40
million onto the core aid program.[31]
1.27
Significant shortcomings with the current budget process, which lacks a
whole-of-ODA approach, have led to fragmentation, inadequate overall scrutiny
and an imbalance between the crucial spine of predictability that is needed for
multi-year aid projects, on the one hand, and the need for flexibility to
respond to unpredictable events on the other. Although the Coalition in
opposition had criticized the use of aid for onshore asylum seeker costs, the
Government removed the $375 million for these costs from the baseline, adding
to confusion about the new aid priorities. On 25 March 2014, the
Prime Minister Tony Abbott created additional funding uncertainty when he
described overseas aid funding from 2017-18 detailed in the Mid-Year Economic
and Fiscal Outlook as an 'aspiration of this government'.[32]
1.28
The Foreign Affairs and Trade portfolio overview for 2013-14 notes that
'the purpose of the Government's aid program is to promote Australia's national
interests by contributing to international economic growth and poverty
reduction'.[33]
This emphasis on economic growth in the new government's approach to overseas
aid and development assistance was further outlined by Minister Bishop at the
Australasian Aid and International Development Policy workshop in February
2014. She stated:
We are going to be
promoting economic growth. Aid is not a panacea to poverty. Millions of people
have been lifted out of poverty by economic growth which creates jobs and which
improves standards of living...
Aid for Trade will be
fundamental to our policy approach. For every single dollar invested in Aid for
Trade, an estimated $8 in additional exports will be created in developing
countries...
Prioritising economic
growth doesn't mean a lesser focus on human development or poverty reduction –
they are two sides of the same coin.[34]
1.29
Recommendation 39 of the Independent Review proposed that the scale-up
of the aid program should be subject to 'the progressive achievement of
predetermined hurdles'. A new phase in the implementation of this
recommendation was evident when, on 21 January 2014, DFAT released a
consultation paper on the development of 'Performance Benchmarks for Australian
Aid' as part of a process of engaging with key aid sector stakeholders. The
paper stated that 'introduction of performance benchmarks is intended to
improve the accountability of the aid program, link performance with funding,
and integrate the aid program with Australia's broader foreign and trade
policies'. It proposed that performance benchmarks for the aid program will be
introduced as part of the 2014-15 budget.[35]
Acknowledgements
1.30
The committee thanks all those who contributed to the inquiry by making
submissions, providing additional information or appearing at the public
hearing to give evidence.
Note on references
1.31
References to the committee Hansard are to the proof Hansard.
Page numbers may vary between the proof and the official Hansard
transcript.
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