HomeWorldUS and European aid cuts could result in 22.6 million deaths worldwide, study finds

US and European aid cuts could result in 22.6 million deaths worldwide, study finds

Human rights and development experts have warned that U.S. President Donald Trump’s moves to dismantle USAID and sharply cut its development aid – moves that have been mirrored in other countries – will cause increases in preventable deaths

November 18, 2025 / 00:16 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
A woman drives a herd of cattle to a river side in Adadle district, Biyolow Kebele in Somali region of Ethiopia
A woman drives a herd of cattle to a river side in Adadle district, Biyolow Kebele in Somali region of Ethiopia

Abrupt cuts to development aid by major donor countries could cause up to 22.6 million additional deaths in developing countries by 2030, including 5.4 million children under five, according to a new study by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal) and other organizations.

The warning comes as the United States, Britain, Germany and France have each reduced development aid for the first time in nearly three decades and are planning further cuts in 2025. The ISGlobal study said continued cuts could reverse decades of progress in global health and poverty reduction.

Story continues below Advertisement

The global health research centre’s report, a copy of which was viewed b Reuters, examined data from 93 low- and middle-income countries to estimate the impact of further reductions in official development assistance (ODA) in 2025, on top of sharp cuts over the past five years.

It concluded that a severe reduction in that assistance would lead to 22.6 million additional deaths, including 5.4 million children under five, by 2030, significantly higher than the research institute had estimated in a previous study that focused on U.S. cuts.