U.S. foreign aid changed in 2025 – and it was felt around the world
11 min
•Jan 2, 20265 months agoSummary
The Trump administration's 90-day freeze on U.S. foreign aid in 2025 has had devastating global consequences, shutting down critical health programs, HIV clinics, and food assistance that affected millions. The administration is shifting to a new model prioritizing direct government partnerships and American businesses over traditional nonprofit aid organizations, fundamentally reshaping how U.S. foreign assistance operates.
Insights
- Foreign aid cuts triggered immediate humanitarian crises including HIV medication shortages, hospital closures, and increased child mortality—the first year this century that under-five deaths increased rather than decreased
- The Trump administration views foreign aid as misaligned with national interest and ideologically problematic, targeting programs supporting gender equity, LGBTQ rights, and climate solutions as 'woke agenda'
- U.S. foreign aid reductions are damaging America's soft power and global reputation, with people overseas questioning U.S. financial strength and stability
- The new aid model prioritizes direct government partnerships and American private companies (like drone delivery firms) over traditional NGO intermediaries, representing a structural shift in aid delivery
- Years of bipartisan consensus on foreign aid as a strategic tool of American power has eroded, replaced by a transactional, America-First approach focused on cost reduction
Trends
Shift from NGO-led aid delivery to direct government-to-government partnerships and American private sector involvementIdeological realignment of foreign aid away from social equity programs toward security and economic interestsErosion of U.S. soft power and global trust due to sudden aid withdrawal and perceived financial weaknessIncreased burden on developing nations to fund critical health and humanitarian programs independentlyRise of private sector solutions (e.g., drone delivery companies) as preferred aid delivery mechanismsDecoupling of foreign aid from traditional bipartisan consensus on American strategic interestsGlobal health setbacks including resurgence of controlled diseases and HIV progression in previously stable populationsReputational damage to U.S. brand and American ideals among aid-dependent populations
Topics
U.S. Foreign Aid Policy Changes 2025Trump Administration Executive Orders on International AssistanceUSAID Restructuring and DefundingGlobal Health Crisis from Aid CutsHIV/AIDS Treatment Program DisruptionsNeglected Tropical Diseases Elimination ProgramsUN World Food Program Funding ReductionsRefugee and Humanitarian Assistance ImpactsAmerican Soft Power and Global ReputationPrivate Sector Foreign Aid Delivery ModelsGovernment-to-Government Aid PartnershipsFaith-Based Organization Aid InvolvementDrone Delivery Services in HealthcareChild Mortality and Development OutcomesBipartisan Foreign Policy Consensus Breakdown
Companies
ZipLine
American drone company receiving $150M U.S. State Department grant to expand medicine and blood supply delivery opera...
Oxfam America
International aid organization whose president warned of destabilizing effects from U.S. foreign aid freeze on vulner...
USAID
U.S. Agency for International Development, the primary federal agency for foreign aid, targeted for restructuring by ...
People
Donald Trump
Signed executive order freezing almost all international assistance for 90 days on inauguration night
Marco Rubio
Issued expansion memo ordering pause on foreign aid spending and stop work order for humanitarian and development pro...
Abby Maxman
Warned that foreign aid freeze could have destabilizing effects and life-or-death consequences for millions globally
Mamadou Kouibali
Coordinates disease elimination programs; described aid freeze impact as 'like a thunderbolt' stopping activities
Dean Karlin
Works on anti-poverty programs in Southwest Uganda; documented reduced economic activity from aid cutbacks
Max Primarak
Conservative think tank representative and former USAID official; defended new aid approach as better stewardship
Theresa Mwanza
HIV-positive mother in Zambia whose 10-year-old daughter lost access to HIV medications when U.S.-funded clinic closed
Ocott Bosco
South Sudanese refugee who lost job with aid group due to U.S. cuts; testified to benefits of USAID-branded assistance
Gabriella Emanuel
Covered global impacts of foreign aid cuts including reporting from Zambia on HIV medication shortages
Fatma Tannis
Reported on Trump administration rationale for aid cuts and new aid delivery model prioritizing government partnerships
Sarah McCammon
Hosted episode covering foreign aid policy changes and global humanitarian impacts
Mary Louise Kelly
Conducted interviews with reporters about foreign aid freeze impacts and new administration strategy
Juana Summers
Reported for Consider This podcast on how foreign aid changes affected people domestically and internationally
Quotes
"It's having seismic impacts for the entire global aid system. And really, frankly, it's a cruel decision that has life or death consequences for millions of people around the world."
Abby Maxman, President of Oxfam America
"It was like a thunderbolt. This lack of financing has stopped our activities."
Mamadou Kouibali, Mali Ministry of Health
"America benefits, they don't know that they are benefiting. They benefit, they trust. People trust them so much."
Ocott Bosco, South Sudanese refugee
"We were spending money every year. It was never changing. We were not solving problems. We were not putting Africans in the lead."
Max Primarak, Heritage Foundation
"So she'll run to the clinic and then she'll come back home and say, oh, the clinic is closed. They're not there anymore. What are we going to do?"
Theresa Mwanza, HIV-positive mother in Zambia
Full Transcript