Britain's newly-appointed Indian-origin minister for international development, Priti Patel, will be leading this policy initiative, according to The Sunday Telegraph.
"Britain's international aid commitments mean it gets fantastic access to foreign leaders all round the world. We can leverage existing relationships to strike trade deals. TheDepartment for International Development (Dfid)can be used to improve Britain's standing in the world. It will be a completely fresh way of looking at Britain's aid budget," the newspaper quoted a political source as saying.
Britain is committed to spend around 0.7 per cent of GDP on foreign aid but India had ceased to be a recipient country in December 2015, when the India-UK aid relationship was modified into one of project-based "technical assistance".
"Successfully leaving the European Union will require a more outward-looking Britain than ever before, deepening our international partnerships to secure our place in the world by supporting economic prosperity, stability and security overseas.
She had been among the leading voices campaiging for Britain to leave the EU in the June 23 referendum.
"We will continue to tackle the great challenges of our time: poverty, disease and the causes of mass migration, while helping to create millions of jobs in countries across the developing world - ourtrading partners of the future," she said.