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Australia makes gender equality key to foreign policy and aid

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on February 5, 2025

2 min read

· Last updated: January 26, 2026

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Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong discussing gender equality in foreign policy - Global Banking & Finance Review
This image features Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong at a U.N. Women event, highlighting the new International Gender Equality Strategy aimed at enhancing women's rights and inclusion in foreign aid programs.
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Australia Prioritizes Gender Equality in Foreign Policy Strategy

By Kirsty Needham

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Gender equality will become central to Australia's foreign policy, diplomacy, trade and aid programmers under a new international strategy, Foreign Minister Penny Wong said on Wednesday in Canberra.

Gender equality is a "stronger predictor of peace than a nation's wealth or political system", Wong said in a speech at a U.N. Women event at parliament house.

Australia's new International Gender Equality Strategy aims to protect women's sexual and reproductive health rights and increase the security and financial inclusion of women.

"Across the world, women are facing more sexual and gender-based violence, and less access to sexual and reproductive health services," Wong said in announcing the new strategy.

Two in three women experience physical or sexual violence in the Pacific region, she added.

Globally, 380 million women and girls live in extreme poverty and 2.4 billion women do not have equal economic opportunities.

"Some will try to delegitimise this strategy as being about a 'special interest'... Gender equality is a matter of national interest," she added.

The United States, the biggest aid donor globally, has frozen aid funding, which includes women's reproductive health, and has criticized clean energy projects for women in the Pacific, as the Trump Administration overhauls foreign assistance.

Australia provides 40% of aid to the Pacific Islands region and already has a policy which requires gender equality goals in new aid projects of A$3 million or more.

Under the new strategy Australia will spend A$30 million to provide more assistance to aid groups to include gender and social inclusion targets in programmers, the foreign affairs department said.

(Reporting by Kirsty Needham; Editing by Michael Perry)

Key Takeaways

  • Australia's foreign policy now centers on gender equality.
  • The strategy aims to improve women's health and financial inclusion.
  • Penny Wong highlights gender equality as crucial for peace.
  • Australia commits A$30 million to gender-focused aid projects.
  • The strategy addresses violence and economic inequality for women.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main topic?
The article discusses Australia's new focus on gender equality in its foreign policy and aid strategy.
What does the strategy aim to achieve?
It aims to protect women's health rights and increase their security and financial inclusion.
How much aid will Australia provide?
Australia will allocate A$30 million to support gender-focused aid projects.

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