Bill Gates hopeful of more aid from China

Bill Gates urges China to become a bigger player in foreign development, help lift millions out of poverty.


Afp May 28, 2013
"I am hopeful that Chinese aid, both in terms of the quality of the aid and the quantity of the aid, will continue to increase," he told a lunch address in Canberra. PHOTO: AFP

CANBERRA: The world's richest man Bill Gates Tuesday urged China to become a bigger player in foreign development following its success in lifting millions of its own people out of poverty.

Speaking in Australia, where the Microsoft co-founder met with Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Gates said the Asian powerhouse was already giving foreign aid but there were "very little facts and figures" on how much.

"I am hopeful that Chinese aid, both in terms of the quality of the aid and the quantity of the aid, will continue to increase," he told a lunch address in Canberra.

"I think that there is a real opportunity there. What they've done to date, as far as anything that is visible, is quite modest."

Gates, who recently overtook Mexican telecommunications tycoon Carlos Slim as the world's richest man with an estimated wealth of $69.8 billion, said his work towards the eradication of polio was a personal priority.

Australia, which committed US$48 million to fight polio in 2011, Tuesday pledged another $77 million over four years from 2015 to wipe out the crippling disease which remains endemic in only three countries - Afghanistan, Nigeria and Pakistan.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is contributing $1.8 billion to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, one-third of the polio endgame strategic plan 2013-2018.

Earlier, Gates said he was disappointed that Australia had slowed the growth of its foreign aid budget but praised it as a global leader in development.

His visit comes weeks after Gillard's administration pushed back its goal of increasing aid spending to 0.5% of gross national income by another year to 2017/18 after a drastic hit to tax revenues.

"The sooner Australia can get up to the 0.5%, which is the stated goal, the more kids will be saved and the more this region will be stable," Gates told national broadcaster ABC.

"So when that got slowed down I was a little disappointed, but it has been increasing and people should feel good about that."

Gates said there were fewer than 300 cases of polio around the world in 2012, but acknowledged that it would be difficult to remove the disease from the countries where it remained.

"These are violent places. There are often rumours against the vaccines. We are going to have to do our best work, we are going to have to be innovative," Gates said.

Attacks against polio workers have resulted in some 20 deaths in Pakistan since December after extremists banned polio vaccinations in Waziristan, alleging the inoculation programme was a cover for espionage.

COMMENTS (2)

Enlightened | 10 years ago | Reply

The rich West looking towards East is a real turn around of the world economic scenario. A few months back Obama came to India looking for ten thousands jobs for the Americans and UK PM recently gave a statement that it is looks forward to India to revive its flailing economy. Now it is Bill Gates is hoping for more aid from China is a shot in the arm for two Asian giants China and India.

sid | 10 years ago | Reply

Chinese will ask contracts first..............most smart people, they don't care about others.......

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