Britain increases aid to the Indian space program. Seriously?!
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The Comprehensive Spending Review has made some of the necessary cuts to government domestic spending (although they don鈥檛 go far enough), but it also will raise the budget of the Department for International Development (DfID) by 37% over the course of the current government.
As an example of the imbalance in cuts, the Treasury鈥檚 figures show a shrinkage of 23% in cumulative real terms for the Home Office between now and 2015, while at the same time showing an increase in DfID鈥檚 budget of 37% in cumulative real terms.
Budgetary cuts are sorely needed, and to increase spending overseas while cutting spending in Britain beggars belief. As with the NHS, ringfencing any department鈥檚 budget is reckless. But unlike the NHS, UK taxpayers will not reap any benefit at all from this hike in aid. And, in fact, neither will most citizens of recipient countries 鈥 development aid is a colossal waste of money that at best helps countries that are already growing and at worst helps governments that ruthlessly oppress their citizens.
Large amounts of overseas aid go to countries like India. Though much of India鈥檚 population is poor, the country鈥檚 economy has grown by nearly 8.8% in 2010 and it has its own space and nuclear weapons programmes. Aid to India subsidizes these costly projects by allowing the government to levy high taxes on its population without having to spend as much money on welfare programmes to offset these taxes.
The British taxpayer is going to be spending less on British police and more on Indian rocketry. Why the Chancellor thinks that this is a good idea is unclear.
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