Pacific nations face ‘lost decade’ due to economic cost of Covid
Countries in the Pacific risk a “lost
decade” following the Covid pandemic, with the region facing its greatest
economic contraction in four decades, according to a new report into foreign
aid.
The latest Lowy Institute Pacific Aid Map,
which sets out aid spending and donations to the Pacific Islands region, shows
US$2.44bn in foreign aid reached the Pacific in 2019, which is about 8% of the
region’s GDP.
Australian aid to the region has increased,
after growing fears China’s “soft diplomacy” through concessional loans for
infrastructure projects was lessening Australia’s influence on the region.
While Australia’s total foreign aid budget has shrunk under the Coalition, the
Pacific has been the focus of what remains, with Australia “retooling” its budget
to increase its contributions to Pacific neighbours.
But China, an emerging force in the region,
slashed its contributions that same year, reducing its aid budget from US$246m
in 2018 by 31%, delivering US$169m in 2019.
Lowy reports that’s the lowest level of aid
China has given to the Pacific region since 2012, with the drop occurring even
as Beijing secured new diplomatic alliances. China’s funding to the region is
more commonly given in the form of a concessional loan, leaving countries
indebted to the government. In 2019, 67% of Chinese aid was given in the form
of loans, up from 41% the year before.
The early analysis for 2020 shows no
indication China has increased its financial support, leaving governments in
the region with financial gaps it has little hope of filling.
The Lowy Institute analysis, to be released
on Wednesday, estimates an additional US$3.5bn will be needed for the region to
recover from the pandemic, but donors appear in short supply.
All up, aid to the Pacific declined by 15%
in 2019, with health spending accounting for just 11% of the US$2.44bn.
Lowy reports Australia accounted for 42% of
all aid to the Pacific region between 2009 and 2019, but in more recent years,
the amount of money being spent on health has been cut in favour of
infrastructure projects.
As part of its pandemic response, Australia
established a temporary AU$305m Covid package within the Pacific Step-Up
program, which aimed to “to help address the economic and social costs of the
pandemic in the Pacific and Timor-Leste, helping to underpin our region’s
stability and economic recovery
The package was mostly designed to help
Pacific governments maintain essential services, including aviation, during the
worst of the pandemic. Vaccines have also been sent to Pacific Island
governments, along with specialist teams, to help curb the spread of Covid
But with the world beginning to move on,
the Lowy Institute points to more needing to be done to ensure nations within
the Pacific region do not fall further behind.