LSE IQ Episode 16 | Do we need to rethink foreign aid?

LSE智商第16集 | 我们是否需要重新思考对外援助?

LSE IQ podcast

教育

2018-07-03

36 分钟
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Contributor(s): Dr Grace Akello, Rafat Ali Al-Akhali, Dr Duncan Green, Dr Ryan Jablonski | Welcome to LSE IQ, the monthly podcast from the London School of Economics and Political Science. This is the podcast where we ask some of the leading social scientists - and other experts - to answer intelligent questions about economics, politics or society. The UK spends a generous 0.7% of its Gross National Income on overseas development aid each year managed by its Department for International Development, or DFID. DFID’s website boasts that its work is building a safer, healthier and more prosperous world, not just for people in developing countries but also those in the UK. Despite this noble sentiment, not everyone supports the concept of aid, complaining that it’s too costly, that it aids corruption or that it is just another way for governments in developed countries to meddle in other nations’ affairs. Add to these objections the recent Oxfam scandal in Haiti – which has seen the organisation permanently banned from operating in the country due to claims of sexual exploitation - and is it time to rethink aid? This episode features: Dr Grace Akello, Visiting Professor at the Firoz Lalji Centre for Africa at LSE; Rafat Ali Al-Akhali, a Fellow of Practice – Strategic Projects at the Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford, Dr Duncan Green, Senior Strategic Adviser at Oxfam GB and a Professor in Practice in International Development at LSE, and Dr Ryan Jablonski, Assistant Professor in Political Science at LSE’s Department of Government. For further information about the podcast visit lse.ac.uk/iq and please tell us what you think using the hashtag #LSEIQ.
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  • Welcome to LSEIQ, a podcast from the London School of Economics and Political Science,

  • where we ask leading social scientists and other experts to answer an intelligent question about economics,

  • politics or society.

  • In 1970,

  • the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution

  • that all developed countries should spend at least 0.7% of their gross national income on overseas development aid.

  • To date, only six countries have met this target, the UK becoming one of them in 2013.

  • The UK's Department for International Development, which is responsible for overseeing the UK's aid,

  • states that its work is building a safer,

  • healthier and more prosperous world, not just for people in developing countries, but also those in the UK.

  • Despite this, not everyone supports the concept of aid, complaining that it's too costly, that it encourages corruption,

  • or that it's just another way for governments with power and money to meddle in other nations' affairs.

  • In this episode of LSEIQ, Jess Winterstein looks at the research and arcs.

  • Do we need to rethink foreign aid?

  • Here's Rafat Ali Alakhali, a former Minister of Youth and Sports in the Government of Yemen,

  • on his experience of working with international aid.

  • In Yemen, after the 2011, you know, it's known as the Arab Spring,

  • there was a change of leadership and a transitional period to kind of adjust into the new way of doing things,

  • let's say.

  • So as part of that new transitional period, there was almost $8 billion in aid promised to Yemen.