The NPR Politics Podcast

U.S. foreign aid changed in 2025 – and it was felt around the world

11 min
Jan 2, 20265 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

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
Support for NPR comes from NPR member stations and Eric and Wendy Schmidt through the Schmidt Family Foundation. Working toward a healthy, resilient, secure world for all. On the web at theschmidt.org. Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Sarah McCammond. I cover politics. And today on the show, we want to bring you some reporting from our friends at the NPR Podcast. Consider this. They looked at how changes to U.S. foreign aid policies have affected people both domestically and internationally. Here's one of Summers. On the night of his inauguration, President Trump signed an executive order that froze almost all international assistance for 90 days. Shortly after that... The State Department has issued an expansion on President Trump's executive action Monday to freeze foreign assistance for 90 days. In a memo, Secretary of State Marco Rubio ordered a pause on foreign aid spending and a stop work order for any existing humanitarian and development projects. What followed was the termination of billions of dollars in aid, which funded everything from infrastructure building to vaccination programs to getting supplies into sensitive conflict zones. Experts like Abby Maxman, president of Oxfam America, warned at the time that this move could have a destabilizing effect in countries where that aid's critical. 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. One small U.S. foreign aid program working to eliminate so-called neglected tropical diseases was shut down this year. Those diseases affect more than a billion people worldwide and can be debilitating. Mamadou Kouibali coordinates several disease elimination programs for the Mali Ministry of Health. It was like a thunderbolt. This lack of financing has stopped our activities. He says the country has used its own money to fill the financial void, but it just isn't enough. These are diseases that make someone completely invalid. They have a very heavy impact on the development of the country. There could be a return of these diseases if we're not careful. Over in Southwest Uganda, locals note that refugees are spending less on food. That's because the U.S. has not renewed its contributions to the UN's World Food Program that helped them buy groceries. Economist Dean Karlin works on anti-poverty programs in the region. Because of the cutbacks in aid, there was less economic activity going on. The markets were not as thriving and they could actually see that difference. As the Trump administration ends its first year, some foreign aid money is flowing again, but much less than before. And the future of U.S. foreign assistance now looks very different. Consider this, the complete overhaul in foreign aid policy is affecting people on the ground who need assistance now. And it may come to affect the reputation of the United States worldwide. From NPR, I'm Juana Summers. This message comes from Subaru. The all-new 2026 Subaru Outback features bold new styling plus standard symmetrical all-wheel drive and an available 260-horsepower turbocharged Subaru boxer engine for confident performance wherever the trail may lead. Standard X-Mode with hail descent control offers greater ability to optimize traction in almost any condition. Discover the all-new Outback at Subaru.com slash Outback. It's consider this from NPR. The cuts to foreign aid and the shutting down of U.S. AID had widespread impact on countries and programs that relied on that assistance. NPR's Fatma Tannis and Gabriella Emanuel have been following this all year and spoke with my co-host, Mary Louise Kelly, about it. Gabriella, just reaction. The Trump administration makes this move right out of the gate. Reaction globally was what? At the beginning, total shock. Some people we spoke to called this kind of a cataclysmic event. Okay, so Fatma, the why question. Why did the Trump administration A, feel they need to do it and B, do it so quickly? Well, it became clear quickly that the Trump administration viewed foreign aid as a big fat problem, that it was not aligned with the national interest. It cost too much money, even though, you know, foreign aid was about 1% of the overall federal budget. So they wanted to really take the whole thing apart and recreate it in a way that fits the America First foreign policy. USAID, as the agency that led foreign aid, was seen by Trump Republicans as a bastion of the left. And some of its programs that supported gender equity or LGBTQ rights or climate solutions or even reproductive health, they were seen as part of this woke agenda that taxpayers should not be funding. And the president even accused the agency of waste, fraud and abuse, even though the White House hasn't provided evidence of that so far. I spoke with Max Primarak. He's with the Heritage Foundation. It's the conservative think tank that was behind Project 2025. Primarak has held several senior roles at USAID in the past. Here's how he put it. We were spending money every year. It was never changing. We were in solving problems. We were not putting Africans in the lead. And it just threw inertia, spending a lot of money without really seemingly to get the kinds of results that we wanted. Other global health experts disagree. You know, we talked to people who said USAID could have been certainly improved in many different ways. But they also said that, you know, burning it all down as the administration did was arbitrary and irresponsible. Well, and Gabriella, say more about the burning it all down and the consequences. You were starting to describe this as you were hearing from people, chaos, words like cataclysmic. What was the impact? Yeah. So we talked to people all over the world. One woman who her son had died because their U.S. funded hospital had closed. Another whose baby had died because she could no longer get the treatment for severe malnutrition. When I went to Zambia about eight weeks after the foreign aid freeze went into effect, I met people who were on HIV medications and found that overnight their neighborhood clinics had shut down. These were clinics funded by the U.S. that had been part of this kind of massive decade-long effort that was started under George W. Bush to control HIV AIDS. The U.S. put over $100 billion into this. It's credited with saving 26 million lives and then suddenly the doors are locked, electricity turned off, and people could no longer get their daily meds. Okay, so just make this specific. Like, is there one human story you would tell that brings us home? Yes. So one mom I met, Theresa Mwanza, she had a 10-year-old daughter. They were both HIV positive. They got their daily medication from one of these local U.S. funded clinics in their neighborhood and then one day her daughter went to get their medications. Here's Theresa Mwanza. 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? I was with them at their house. The little girl was confused about what was happening. And at that point when I met the two of them, they had completely run out of their medications and the 10-year-old girl, the daughter, was already showing visible signs of the virus of HIV returning because she wasn't on her meds. And this is not an isolated event. I met many others who this was happening to as well. People losing weight, developing these open sores, flu-like symptoms, all signs that HIV was progressing to AIDS. And I'll just add here that the scale is hard to overstate. One study out of the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation found that this is the first year, this century, that child deaths under age five went up instead of down. And that is directly due to AIDS cuts. Fatma, it's so interesting because it wasn't that long ago that you would have found a largely bipartisan consensus that, in fact, foreign aid was in America's interest. It was a tool of power that America could project abroad, a soft power, but making friends, building good will, spreading ideals about America and American democracy. I know this is hard to answer, but are you able to track how this year's developments have changed the way people see the United States? It is hard to track, like you said, but in speaking to people when we were out there on the ground overseas, you could see that it had had some impact on the way people viewed the United States. I saw that when I was in Uganda in August, and there was confusion about why the U.S. global superpower, as people put it, would suddenly stop giving money. People thought it was a sign that the U.S. was struggling financially or that it wasn't as strong as it used to be, but it was also clear that years of aid had bought the U.S. some goodwill among people. Like Ocott Bosco, he's a refugee from South Sudan who lost his job with an aid group because of the U.S. cuts. And he told me America's foreign aid money was not just a one-way street. It wasn't just the recipients, like himself, who benefited. America benefits, but they don't know that they are benefiting. They benefit, they trust. People trust them so much. Bosco grew up in a camp for displaced people, and he told me he never forgot the food and medicine that he and his family got that carried the USAID logo, the American flag, with the words from the American people on it. Okay, so we're at this moment now, Fatma, where the U.S. is spending less money on foreign aid, and they're also spending it differently. There's a new approach they've rolled out. What is it? That's right. They rolled it out in September, and instead of working with nonprofits or aid groups like the old model, the U.S. is now prioritizing working directly with governments, creating opportunities for American businesses and also faith-based organizations. So the State Department recently announced one of its first major grants, $150 million to the American drone company ZipLine, to expand their operations in Africa, delivering medicine, blood supplies, other health supplies. They also made agreements with Kenya, Uganda, and Rwanda, where the U.S. will be investing hundreds of millions of dollars to those countries, and those governments will be also putting in money as well. Here's how Primerac with the Heritage Foundation sees this new strategy. This administration is being a far better steward of American taxpayer monies than previous administrations were. So it's recognizing we have a debt problem, recognizing that we have to be effective around the world with less and taking the steps to do so. Okay, so they argument there for this new approach. Gabrielle, I have one more question to you just before I let you all go. What happened to the little girl who couldn't get her HIV meds? So we have good news here, actually. The Zambian government heard our reporting. They went to the villages where we had profiled the community and they re-interviewed them, saw the situation, and made sure that they could access their HIV meds. It's a small number of people, relatively speaking, but it was a good sign. NPR's Gabriella Emanuel and FOPNet Tennis, thank you so much for your reporting. Thank you. That was reporting from the NPR Podcast. Consider this. We'll be back in your feeds on Monday as usual. I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover politics and thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.