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Britain to stop aid to India | Britain to stop aid to India |
(35 minutes later) | |
All financial assistance from the UK to India will end from 2015, the international development secretary, Justine Greening, has announced. | All financial assistance from the UK to India will end from 2015, the international development secretary, Justine Greening, has announced. |
Britain is to make no new financial aid commitments to India, and will save about £200m by 2015. | |
Greening, who took responsibility for Britain's aid budget in September, said programmes already under way would be completed as planned but no new initiatives would be signed off. | |
British support for India will in future be limited to skills sharing in area areas such as trade and investment and health. | |
"After reviewing the programme and holding discussions with the government of India this week, we agree that now is the time to move to a relationship focusing on skills sharing rather than aid," Greening said. | "After reviewing the programme and holding discussions with the government of India this week, we agree that now is the time to move to a relationship focusing on skills sharing rather than aid," Greening said. |
"Having visited India, I have seen first-hand the tremendous progress being made. India is successfully developing and our own bilateral relationship has to keep up with 21st-century India. It's time to recognise India's changing place in the world. | "Having visited India, I have seen first-hand the tremendous progress being made. India is successfully developing and our own bilateral relationship has to keep up with 21st-century India. It's time to recognise India's changing place in the world. |
"It is of course critical that we fulfil all the commitments we have already made and that we continue with those short-term projects already under way which are an important part of the UK and government of India's development programme." | "It is of course critical that we fulfil all the commitments we have already made and that we continue with those short-term projects already under way which are an important part of the UK and government of India's development programme." |
The move follows criticism of the government for maintaining aid to India, which has a booming economy and its own space programme. It will delight Conservative MPs critical of David Cameron's commitment to spending 0.7% of national income on overseas aid. | The move follows criticism of the government for maintaining aid to India, which has a booming economy and its own space programme. It will delight Conservative MPs critical of David Cameron's commitment to spending 0.7% of national income on overseas aid. |
The changes will mean Britain spending about £200m less from 2013 to 2015 than had been planned by the former international development secretary Andrew Mitchell. | The changes will mean Britain spending about £200m less from 2013 to 2015 than had been planned by the former international development secretary Andrew Mitchell. |
After 2015, the UK's relationship with India is to focus on "technical co-operation", with a hub of British development experts working with the Delhi government, and a programme of private sector investment to assist some of the poorest parts of India. | |
Officials said the UK's technical assistance was expected to be about a 10th of the current programme of support. | Officials said the UK's technical assistance was expected to be about a 10th of the current programme of support. |
British funding to India was cut last year but still committed the UK to spending £280m a year until 2015. | British funding to India was cut last year but still committed the UK to spending £280m a year until 2015. |
The Indian finance minister, Pranab Mukherjee, last year said the country no longer wanted or needed the British aid, describing the money as "a peanut in our total development expenditure". | The Indian finance minister, Pranab Mukherjee, last year said the country no longer wanted or needed the British aid, describing the money as "a peanut in our total development expenditure". |
In a statement to MPs, Greening said: "We have agreed that the UK's programme of financial grant aid to India will end. From now, all new development co-operation programmes will be either technical assistance programmes focused on sharing skills and expertise, or investments in private sector projects focused on helping the poor," she said. | In a statement to MPs, Greening said: "We have agreed that the UK's programme of financial grant aid to India will end. From now, all new development co-operation programmes will be either technical assistance programmes focused on sharing skills and expertise, or investments in private sector projects focused on helping the poor," she said. |
"We will finish existing financial grant projects responsibly, so that they all complete as planned by 2015." | "We will finish existing financial grant projects responsibly, so that they all complete as planned by 2015." |
She said the changes reflected India's "rapid growth and development progress" over the past decade. | She said the changes reflected India's "rapid growth and development progress" over the past decade. |
"India's growing ability to finance its own development programmes means that the time has now come to end the UK's financial grant support. The growing two-way trade and investment between our two countries means that our development partnership should increasingly be about trade not aid. | "India's growing ability to finance its own development programmes means that the time has now come to end the UK's financial grant support. The growing two-way trade and investment between our two countries means that our development partnership should increasingly be about trade not aid. |
"As part of the new focus on sharing skills and expertise, we have agreed to develop a cross-government technical assistance programme focused on priority issues, such as growth, trade, investment, education, skills and health." | "As part of the new focus on sharing skills and expertise, we have agreed to develop a cross-government technical assistance programme focused on priority issues, such as growth, trade, investment, education, skills and health." |
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