Editor, The Times:
As someone who advocates for official development assistance, I often hear protest about helping ours before helping others.
What most don’t seem to realize is that foreign aid pays huge net returns for Canada.
Our foreign assistance increases peace and political stability in poor nations. Desperate people are ripe for exploitation by extremists and it’s a lot cheaper preventing extremism than fighting it.
Supporting healthcare in other countries slows the spread of increasingly drug resistant diseases that no know borders. Recall that the worst epidemics in our history started in other nations, and there are strains of TB emerging that have no effective treatment.
Lastly, the battle against climate change is supported by Canada’s foreign aid, as economic development can reverse desertification and deforestation, and encourage sustainability.
Underdevelopment, inequality, poverty, political instability, human rights violations, and environmental degradation are all interconnected, and impact Canada in many subtle and not so subtle ways.
Security, economic growth and trade, climate change and public health are impacted. This is well known and long researched, yet our aid commitment is far less than most developed nations.
It’s a long neglected government file that gets little thanks or public praise, and that needs to change. When we take care of others in this interconnected world we take care of ourselves.
Nathaniel Poole
Victoria, B.C.