COVID-19 in Developing Countries: Secondary Impacts (Report)

Author(s)
International Development Committee (UK House of Commons)
Publication language
English
Pages
pp50
Date published
19 Jan 2021
Publisher
House of Commons, United Kingdom
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Development & humanitarian aid, COVID-19, Epidemics & pandemics, Food and nutrition, Health, Recovery and Resillience, Response and recovery, Water, sanitation and hygiene
Countries
United Kingdom

COVID-19 and its secondary impacts are causing suffering and disruption around the world, especially in developing countries. Poor, marginalised groups generally consider the pandemic a crisis on top of other, existing crises while donors, multilateral organisations and NGOs are warning that COVID-19 and the response to it could undo the progress towards achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The dilemma of trying to stem the spread of infections while avoiding worse harm in other areas is at the heart of the global policy-making challenge. The Government has made countering the spread and impact of COVID-19 one of its top priorities in its foreign and development policy. It has taken several measures in response—these include investing more than £700 million to date in responding to the primary and secondary impacts of the virus, creating the post of a Special Envoy for Famine Prevention and Humanitarian Affairs, and adapting pre-COVID-19 contracts with aid partners in an attempt to make them more flexible and more responsive to the immediate needs of local communities.

This report focuses on four areas in considering the effectiveness of the UK’s contribution: non-COVID healthcare; economic performance and livelihoods; food security; and the well-being of women and girls.

 

 

Authors: 
International Development Committee (UK House of Commons)