The Forum > General Discussion > Re: Aid Discussion
Re: Aid Discussion
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I made a post “Putting Aid on the agenda for the 2012 Budget" a little over a month ago and it got about 5 pages of response. Sorry to those involved for my late reply, I do appreciate all the input that you guys gave!
In this post I made the suggestion that in the 2012 budget there should be an increase of our international aid contribution from 0.35% to 0.5%
Some of the responses included:
-Aid goes into a corrupt bureaucracy and could be better spent inside our own country. Can be allegedly spent on 5 star resorts and other irrelevant costs.
-The amount we spend on asylum seekers and refugees should be counted as aid.
-Foreign aid should have a focus on sustainability and reducing the birth rate. "The more you feed the more they breed".
-Domestic problems should come first, we need to set a good example of a sustainable society before giving aid overseas
Jayb made a really significant argument:
"Australia need to immediately stop all non-essential Aid to foreign Countries. Essential Aid is for Catastrophes such as Tidal Waves or Cyclones. Australia’s Hospitals/Health service, Schools & School system, Trade Training, Aged Care, Road/Rail infrastructure, Communication infrastructure is in a dilapidated state. This money we are giving away is urgently needed to be spent in Australia.
An old saying, 'You cannot help others if you cannot help yourself.'"
I like this argument as Australia is quite far behind compared to the developed world. But I’m wondering if I told you that Aid actually does work and a relatively small increase could drastically change living conditions for a large amount of people.
For example, child deaths have decreased from 20.5 million in 1960 to 10.5 million in 2004.
We heard the other day the promised increase in aid was postponed.
I found this link the other day while researching this topic. It is from the Australian Council for International Aid, so it is a bit of a different perspective. It addresses some of the arguments you have about aid.
http://www.acfid.asn.au/resources/docs_resources/myths-busted-the-facts-about-australian-aid/view