In their attempts to reach agreement on the next 7-year
EU budget, EU member states must preserve EU aid, a smart investment that
represents just 6% of the overall budget, according to Concord, Oxfam
International, Plan and ONE. In just six years, EU aid has made a lasting
difference in the lives of millions and helped them out of poverty: 50 million
people were stopped from being hungry, more than nine million children have
enrolled in primary education, more than five million have been vaccinated
against measles and more than 31 million people have been connected to drinking
water. The positive results and effectiveness of EU aid have been cited by many
independent reports. Reviews by institutions including the Center for Global Development
and Brookings Institution, and the OECD have also ranked EU aid highly. Publish
What You Fund’s 2012 Aid Transparency Index ranked the European Commission’s DG
Development and Cooperation (DG DEVCO) 5th out of 72 aid organisations across
43 indicators.
Support for EU aid remains strong among European
citizens. The results of a Eurobarometer survey released in October show that
85% of EU citizens believe that Europe should continue helping developing
countries despite the economic crisis, while almost two thirds believe that aid
to developing countries should be increased. It is telling that this support
remains strong in Greece, Spain and Ireland – the European countries most
affected by the crisis.
According to a report
published last week by the Overseas Development Institute, the National
Institute of Economic and Social Research and ONE, looking at the economic
impact of EU aid on donor and recipient countries, EU aid will also more than
pay for itself by 2020. The research shows that as well as boosting GDP in
sub-Saharan Africa and globally, EU taxpayers would recoup the funds for the
world’s poorest with a 20% return on investment.