In June of last year, Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop pledged that Canberra’s massively downsized foreign aid program would now become more tightly focused on the Indo-Pacific — a key commitment of the Abbott government’s aid policy framework called the “new aid paradigm.” A vast region of strategic importance to Australia, the Indo-Pacific is generally understood to include South Asia, East Asia and the Pacific.
The Abbott government’s latest budget, unveiled Tuesday, directs 93 percent of Australian official development assistance for bilateral and regional programs in 2015-16 to the Indo-Pacific, just above Bishop’s 90 percent target. The Australian fiscal year begins July 1.
It’s worth noting that the Indo-Pacific has long-garnered the vast majority of Australian aid spending, albeit slightly more so now that the Abbott government has reversed course on the previous Labor government’s donor ambitions in Africa and Latin America.