UK earmarks half of aid budget for fragile states

U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron announced yesterday that the U.K. will dedicate half of the Department for International Development’s aid budget to developing “fragile and failing” states, as part of a “full-spectrum response” to the threat posed by Islamic State group.

The Department for International Development committed last year to spending 30 percent of its $18 billion aid budget on fragile and failing states, according to 2014 data from the Department for International Development. The shift announced yesterday would therefore necessitate a pull of approximately $3.6 billion from elsewhere in the aid budget.

43 percent of the U.K.’s total aid budget – including funds administered through the Foreign and Commonwealth Office – currently goes to fragile states and regions, a DfID spokeswoman told Devex.

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