UK Parliament / Open data

The merger between DFID and the FCO and the implications for expenditure of Official Development Assistance (ODA) across government

Commons Debate pack by Philip Brien, Anna Dickson, Jon Lunn, Nigel Walker and Alex Knight. It was first published on Wednesday, 24 June 2020. It was last updated on Thursday, 2 July 2020.

On 16 June 2020 the Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, announced that the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) and the Department for International Development (DfID) are to merge. The new department will be called the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.

This new department will be responsible for the spending of both current departments. In the current set of Estimates, DfID plans a Resource DEL (day to-day spending) budget of £7,548.4 million in 2020-21, and a Capital DEL (investment budget) of £2,623.3 million. The FCO plans a Resource DEL (day-to-day spending) budget in 2020-21 of £2,755.8 million, and a Capital DEL (investment) budget of £101.8 million.

In 2019, the total aid budget was £15.2 billion. DfID spent 73% of this aid, with the FCO accounting for almost 4.5% and other departments making up the remainder.

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Reference

CDP-2020-0077 
International Development Act 2002
Tuesday, 26 February 2002
Public acts
Official Development Assistance
Thursday, 9 July 2020
Parliamentary proceedings
House of Commons

Contains statistics

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