Issue 15: 8 February 2021

Page 18

Opinion

8 FEBRUARY 2021

Amid a tidal wave of austerity, the UK aid narrative should be one of substance over sum

Last year, the government announced a merger within the UK aid sector and a £2.9bn budget cut (Credit: UK MOD Crown).

Maxine Betteridge-Moes, MA Media in Development The year 2020 dealt two serious blows to the UK aid industry. First was Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s June announcement of a merger between the Department for International Development (DfID) and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), which was widely condemned by aid officials for draining the resources of an agency ranked the most accountable aid donor in the world. Next came Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s announcement in November that the government will cut its aid budget from 0.7% to 0.5% of gross national income in 2021. The fiscal strategy behind these decisions was justified under the guise of securing Britain’s ‘national interests’ in light of the economic and social crises brought on by the coronavirus pandemic. How an individual reacts to this news, considering it either sensible or nonsensical, can largely be attributed to a person’s political affiliation and media consumption. For example, the conservative tabloid the Daily Mail ran an op-ed titled: ‘Good riddance to Foreign Aid's self-serving Department for International Narcissists.’ The writer, Ian Birrell, argues for wider reform of the sector despite ‘predictable protests from charity chiefs and fat-cat aid consultants fearful that

18

their chunky salaries might now be curtailed.’ On the other end of the political news spectrum, the left-wing Guardian published the op-ed: ‘Cutting UK overseas aid in the name of Covid fiscal prudence is pure nonsense.’ Economics editor Larry Elliott argues that the UK has enjoyed real global clout in development thanks in part to a separate and well-resourced DfID that has now been ‘tossed away in acts of wilful political vandalism.’

“While progressives and conservatives alike tend to agree on the concept of development, media coverage often asserts that disagreement over foreign aid all boils down to budget.” These conflicting viewpoints in two of England’s biggest news outlets illustrate a broader trend of aid as a partisan issue. While progressives and conservatives alike tend to agree on the concepts of

development, media coverage often asserts that disagreement over foreign aid all boils down to budget. As Pablo Yanguas points out in his book ‘Why We Lie About Aid,’ money, by itself, means nothing when it comes to solving the challenges of development. ‘You could have a smaller budget and still have the same impact if you use it better,’ he told me. ‘There will be a disruption effect for sure, however I do think it's an opportunity to rethink whether the equation money equals impact holds true or not.’ Another important point is that despite knowing little about how foreign aid actually works, the British public is easily swayed by exaggerated headlines and over simplistic narratives about the industry. Even in these times of austerity, the media narrative of UK aid should be less about the money and more about the impact. There are a number of ways the aid sector and the media can achieve this in the short, medium, and long terms. Journalist Molly Anders reported on several of them in her excellent series for Devex about how media coverage affects aid work. In the short term, charities need to acknowledge wrongdoing quickly and should address organizational or sector-wide issues in these responses to minimize a feeding frenzy of damaging news cycles. Context is also key in crisis response and

in the news cycle. The UK aid budget gets disproportionate media attention, with little analysis around the purpose of interventions such as gender empowerment, agricultural innovation, and anti-corruption, how much these interventions cost, and whether they are working. This context will in turn shape long term efforts to tell stories about aid through more relevant storytellers. This involves more coverage of staff onthe-ground, beneficiaries, and other partners that are more relatable and can comment directly on the work being done. As Yanguas explained to me, there needs to be a distinction in coverage between humanitarian work such as crisis and disaster response, and interventions that accelerate development that is already taking place. The UK prides itself on its global reputation as a leader in international development. That reputation will be tested later this year when the government hosts the COP-26 and G-7 summits, but budget and reputation are not all that matters. If we are to hold the aid industry and the government to account in these times of unprecedented need and widespread misinformation, it’s more important than ever for the media to provide an honest, complex, and nuanced narrative of the sector that is, above all, concerned with substance over sum.

WWW.SOASSPIRIT.CO.UK


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Our Top SOAS Society Picks!

5min
page 29

Resolute Rashford and the Order of School Meals

2min
page 28

A New Wave for Women’s Surfing

3min
page 28

Getting 'Messi' in America?

5min
page 27

Somewhere over the rainbow: gay cinema's stylistic decline

3min
page 26

Bridgerton’s Race Problem

2min
page 26

London Fashion Week February 2021 throughout the Covid-19 Pandemic: What to expect?

3min
page 25

When will the film industry go back to normal?

2min
page 25

Love in the Time of Corona

2min
page 24

How the Fire got its Smoke

3min
page 24

The Story of Hacer

3min
pages 22-23

Humans of SOAS: Professor Costas Lapavitsas

4min
page 21

The Indian Farming Reformation

3min
page 20

10 Years on, did the Arab Spring bring stability to the region?

3min
page 19

The bitter truth of Israel's vaccination ‘success’

3min
page 19

Amid a tidal wave of austerity, the UK aid narrative should be one of substance over sum

3min
page 18

Mental Health Is A Social Justice Issue

2min
page 17

Belarus fights on in silence

3min
page 17

Dutch government steps down over childcare allowance scandal

3min
page 16

Qatar Blockade Quashed

3min
page 16

Farmers in India to reach the pinnacle of their protests on Republic Day

2min
page 15

Student protest in Sri Lankan University: how the destruction of a Tamil War Memorial highlights the legacy of the Civil War 

2min
page 15

Nigeriens Say "Saï Bazoum"

3min
page 14

Museveni declared winner of Ugandan vote amidst accusations of electoral fraud

3min
page 13

Cambodian court begins mass trial against human rights activists

1min
page 12

Rohingya: stateless and now homeless

3min
page 12

Climate Catastrophe continues as 2020 is ranked as the warmest year on record by NASA

3min
page 11

Brexit: the New Rules of the EU-UK Relationship

3min
page 10

Death of Mohamud Hassan: Family and Protesters Demand Justice

3min
page 9

Assange Extradition Put on Pause

2min
page 9

PM Regretful Over ‘Grim’ Covid Milestone

3min
page 8

London Academia: The Birthplace of Eugenics?

2min
page 7

Skirt Length Scandal

2min
page 6

Children failed and inequality soars as England enters third lockdown

3min
page 6

No Detriment Policy Explained

2min
page 5

The Robeson: SOAS's first student-led magazine for PoC

2min
page 4

SOAS Alumnus and human rights advocate freed from detainment

2min
page 4

Letter from the Editor

2min
page 2

Interview with new SOAS Director, Adam Habib

9min
pages 1, 3
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.