Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at the Pacific Islands Forum last year.Credit:Joe Armao
As well as creating a $250 million fund to spur private investment in the Pacific,the government will mandate that all aid projects over $3 million have a gender equality objective and that at least half of such projects have a climate objective.
“Australia will concentrate our resources on the issues that matter most to our neighbours,” Foreign Minister Penny Wong said.
“We will offer genuine partnerships based on respect,listening and learning from each other.”
However,senior Labor sources warned the party’s official commitment to spend 0.5 per cent of gross domestic income on foreign aid was not achievable in the near future and was not a priority for the government.
Australia currently spends about 0.22 per cent of national income on foreign aid,among the lowest of any developed nation.
Under the new policy,foreign aid spending will increasingly focus on infrastructure projects,with a focus on local job creation rather than imported workers,as well as policing and security.
Beijing has been widely criticised for using imported Chinese workers for its overseas infrastructure projects and for saddling developing countries with unsustainable levels of debt.