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ID147640
Title ProperAustralian aid after the ‘Golden Consensus
Other Title Informationfrom aid policy to development policy?
LanguageENG
AuthorDay, Benjamin
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the decade preceding the election of the Abbott Coalition Government in 2013, a so-called ‘golden consensus’ governed Australian aid policy. During this period Australia’s aid spending increased by over 80% in real terms. However, after winning government the 2013 Federal Election, the Abbott Government made a series of significant and unexpected aid policy decisions, cutting the aid budget three times in fifteen months and integrating AusAID, Australia’s aid agency, into the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. This article considers the future role of aid in Australia’s diplomacy primarily by engaging with a prior question: how was it possible for the golden consensus to be uprooted so easily? Conducting a post-mortem reveals that Australia’s development constituency bears some responsibility for the fragility of the consensus. This analysis also reveals the critical role the development constituency will play in determining the extent to which Australia is able to embrace the ‘beyond aid’ agenda. To meet this contemporary challenge, the development community must heed the lessons of the collapse of the golden consensus and, in particular, overcome its reticence to engage in broader foreign policy debates.
`In' analytical NoteAustralian Journal of International Affairs Vol. 70, No.6; Dec 2016: p. 641-656
Journal SourceAustralian Journal of International Affairs Vol: 70 No 6
Key WordsDiplomacy ;  Development ;  Australia ;  Foreign Aid ;  Foreign Policy ;  Beyond Aid


 
 
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