(The Telegraph)
More than £160
million of British foreign aid is being channelled through an offshore
investment fund used to buy Boeing jets for an African airline and other big
business deals.
The Emerging
Africa Infrastructure Fund (EAIF) has received funding from the British
taxpayer through a set of offshore companies. The British aid money is used to
put together multi-million pound business deals in Africa .
A recent deal,
signed last year, helped finance the purchase of 10 Boeing 787 Dreamliners –
the world’s most advanced passenger plane – by Ethiopian Airlines, owned by the
Ethiopian government.
The EAIF is
managed by the Frontier Markets Fund Managers (FMFM), which receives about £4
million a year for its services from the money it receives from the Department
for International Development (DfID) and other governments.
FMFM’s staff are
based at Standard Bank in London , which receives 70 per cent of the profits
the fund earns.
But the company is
registered in Mauritius , where foreign companies receive an 80 per
cent discount on corporation tax, meaning any profits earned by companies
linked to the fund pay tax at a rate of 3 per cent. This compares with a UK rate of 23 per cent.
Critics said
yesterday that DfID appeared to be using aid money to pay City bankers and fund
corporate deals rather than help the world’s poor.
“International aid should be used to help
the world’s poorest, not invest in international airlines,” said Matthew
Sinclair, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance .
John Hilary, executive director of the
anti-poverty charity War on Want, said: “DfID is legally obliged to use the aid
budget to combat poverty around the world. Instead, it is now channelling
hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money to private investment funds
run out of tax havens.” He said using Mauritius as a base allowed companies funded by DfID
to escape public scrutiny.
“The British public has a right to know why
aid money is being used to prop up wealthy corporate enterprises rather than
fighting poverty as it is supposed to do.”
EAIF was set up in 2002 by the then Labour
government and received £68.5 million over the next eight years. The Coalition
has committed £100 million of further funding until 2015. FMFM also runs
another investment fund called GuarantCo, which has received £64 million from
DfID in the past decade.
The EAIF receives its money through the
Private Infrastructure Development Group (PIDG), also registered in Mauritius . PIDG was set up by DfID with funding from
the Swiss, Dutch and Swedish governments.
EAIF provided a £20 million bridging loan
for the Ethiopian deal. Nick Rouse, FMFM’s managing director, said the fund –
because of its backing from DfID and other governments – could secure financing
for schemes that commercial banks would not lend to.
Mr Rouse said the financing of the
Dreamliners allowed Ethiopian Airlines to compete with rivals such as Emirates.
“They couldn’t get the money anywhere else,” he added.
A DfID spokesman said: “Providing
commercial loans when other finance is simply not available helps African
economies to flourish and end their reliance on development assistance. This is
an excellent example of how investing in local companies and creating jobs can
lay the foundations for future growth.”
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