The week before the G8 convenes once again is time to reminisce about the good old days but this is about more than nostalgia. Even in today's age of austerity, the G8 has a chance to build on the successes of the Gleneagles summit and, in particular, tackle the forgotten scandal of hunger.
A child dies every 10 seconds from malnutrition because they were unlucky enough to be born at a time and place where there is too little food available or where people cannot afford to buy the food that is. One in eight people in the world will go to bed hungry tonight. That's 870 million people. The total population of the G8 is just 890 million. Just imagine the urgency to act if those 870 million lived in the G8 rather than in Africa, Asia and other poor countries.
Since 2005, I've visited developing countries and campaigned pushing leaders to deliver on their promises to the poorest and seeing for myself the difference the money can make. In Tanzania, I met the charming and humbling villagers of Engare Sero, who explained to me that for them aid meant a grain bank so they no longer had to endure a life-sapping 10-day round trip for a single bag of maize. In Nairobi's Kibera slum, I met girls as young as eight scavenging for food who were forced to give sexual favours to the criminals who controlled the dump so they could get to the fresher garbage as it was unloaded from the lorries.
At Tokyo and then Toronto leaders pledged again to deliver the aid they had promised, but with the notable exception of Britain, those expected to stump up significant sums have fallen short increases, yes but billions shy of their promises.
In Cannes at the G20, we hoped a Robin Hood tax on banks might fill the gap it still might. Eleven countries in Europe are pressing ahead with a financial transaction tax that could raise tens of billions from the sector that caused the economic crisis to help people in Europe and poor countries. Britain is not only not one of those countries, but George Osborne is going to court to block it. This year's G8 is unlikely to see much movement on aid beyond the additional money for nutrition announced at last weekend's hunger summit.
Protecting poor people from land grabs, making it easier for them to find out what companies and their governments are doing and stopping the ridiculous situation where G8 members' policies encourage land to be used for growing fuel rather than food: all these will help. But perhaps the biggest step forward the G8 could make would be to end the scandal that sees companies dodge more than $160bn a year in tax they should pay poor countries.
The actions the G8 needs to take are simple. They need to agree new global rules to ensure that companies can no longer use tax havens to avoid paying their fair share here and in poor countries. Here David Cameron has a crucial role to play Britain is responsible for more tax havens than any other country in the world.
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