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Africa: Data Modelling Reveals the Heavy Toll of USAID Cuts On Africa

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Given the US’ major contribution to aid, Trump’s cuts could push 5.7 million more Africans into extreme poverty next year.
Since returning to office in January, US President Donald Trump has signed more than 73 executive orders, many of which can be considered an assault on the rule of law and separation of powers in the United States, an attack on the country’s former Western allies, and on the liberal international order more generally. Most important for Africa, is his move to gut US development assistance and walk back efforts to fight corruption.
Following the 20 January executive order on Reevaluating and Realigning United States Foreign Aid, USAID started distributing Notices of Suspension, instructing recipients to stop working on awards and not incur any new costs.
Subsequently, emergency food assistance and administrative expenses necessary to administer it were exempted by a 90-day waiver, as was life-saving humanitarian support to several countries, including the Central African Republic (CAR), Chad, South Sudan, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Uganda and Rwanda.
In line with the Republican Party’s war on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI), all activities related to abortions, family planning, gender or ‘DEI ideology programs,’ transgender surgeries and other non-life saving assistance are specifically excluded from the waiver.
The effect on Africa is considerable since spending on health is the largest component of US aid to Africa. HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment projects are readily categorised as part of support for family planning, which has been under attack by successive Republican administrations for several decades. On 26 February, US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)-funded HIV organisations were notified by the US government that their financial support had been terminated permanently, with immediate effect. Other USAID-backed health programmes were also closed for good, such as the United Nations Programme on HIV/Aids.
Other funding from the US supports agricultural productivity and economic growth, bolsters security, promotes democracy, human rights and governance, and improves access to quality education and social services. All of this is now under threat.
For all its detractors, aid remains important for many poor African countries. In 2023, total overseas development assistance (ODA) from OECD countries to Africa amounted to US$59.7 billion, more than a quarter of which is provided by the US.
Modelling using the University of Denver’s International Futures forecasting platform finds that 5.7 million more Africans would fall below the US$2.15 extreme poverty income level in the next year if Trump’s administration succeeds in its aid-reduction ambition.
And by 2030, a cumulative total of almost 19 million more Africans would be considered extremely poor when compared with a business-as-usual scenario. The numbers differ by country, of course, with the DRC, Ethiopia, Somalia, Niger, Uganda and Tanzania being most affected given their large populations. By 2030, the economy of sub-Saharan Africa will also be US$4.6 billion smaller.
Given its outsized role in the provision of humanitarian assistance (the US is the largest provider globally), mortality amongst internally displaced and refugee populations will increase dramatically.
The reason for these alarming numbers is the huge role played by US aid. When support from regional and international financial institutions and multilateral bodies such as the United Nations agencies is included, the US provides up to 26% of all aid to Africa. That would include multi-country initiatives such as PEPFAR, the President’s Malaria Initiative, Feed the Future, Prosper Africa and Power Africa.
In the scenario that was modelled, aid to Africa was reduced by 20% (from the 26% provided by the US) on the assumption that some aid will survive the cuts. But even then, the impact is still massive given the enormous spread of US assistance.
All African countries except Eritrea received aid from the US in 2023. Ethiopia was the largest recipient of USAID funds, receiving more than US$1.7 bn. Other large recipients of economic development support from USAID were Somalia, DRC, Nigeria, Kenya, South Sudan, Uganda, Mozambique, Tanzania, South Africa, Zambia and Malawi – each of which received more than US$400 million in 2023.
Exasperated by the apparent limited effects of aid, and concerns about corruption and dependency, most donors argue for trade, not aid, and push for private-sector engagement as an alternative. The problem is that foreign direct investment (FDI) does not come to low-income countries that generally also trade little.
We tested this again by modelling the extent to which increased FDI of the same volume can offset the impact of the US aid reduction, but found no evidence. In fact, for most poor countries, more FDI tends to increase inequality and poverty in the short and medium term given the benefits that accrue to skilled rather than low-skilled labour. Eventually, things change, but it takes a long time and requires a suite of policies.
Meanwhile, USAID has paused much of its funding, started laying off most of its employees and moved the remainder into the State Department. USAID staff posted overseas have been given 30 days to return to the US, after which they have to cover their own expenses.
Trump and Elon Musk want to reduce the number of USAID staff to 300, enabling only a very small number of projects and disbursements – even if former employees were brought back as consultants to manage the subsequent administrative nightmare.
A number of Trump’s executive orders are being challenged in court. Several are unlikely to withstand judicial scrutiny, including that on USAID since the agency was established by an act of Congress and is now being dismantled by Presidential decree. Last week a US district court judge issued a temporary restraining order challenging the USAID staff cuts, only for that to be overturned by a federal judge.
The US is not the only country cutting back on aid, but the speed and size are unprecedented. Domestic budgetary pressures have led other key donors, like Germany, the second-largest provider of ODA in absolute terms, to cut more than €4.8 billion (US$5.3 billion) in development and humanitarian assistance between 2022 and 2025 with additional reductions likely.
Similarly, France reduced its 2024-2025 ODA budget by more than US$1 billion, while the United Kingdom cut more than US$900 million after almost £1 billion (US$1.28 billion) was diverted to housing asylum-seekers in the country.
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Compared to these more gradual reductions – which are themselves hugely problematic – the deep and hurried cuts in US aid to Africa will seriously damage attitudes toward the US, increase poverty and reduce economic growth. China may cheer at the damage the US is doing to its standing in Africa, but African people won’t.
Instead of dismantling USAID, the Trump administration would have been better served by aggressively implementing the localisation strategy started by outgoing USAID administrator Samantha Power. This strategy envisioned 25% of monies spent going to local organisations instead of US consultants and intermediaries. Only 9.6% was thus spent in 2023, pointing to the extent to which aid is indeed in need of reform.
While Washington rethinks its approach, African governments and institutions must also recalibrate. Strengthening domestic revenue collection, simplifying and harmonising tax regimes, deepening ties with emerging donors, facilitating investment and reducing dependency on volatile commodity exports could help buffer against such geopolitical swings in the future.
Reforming aid should not mean abandoning it. If US policymakers truly seek to pursue their national interests and counter China in Africa, they must rethink their approach – before the damage becomes irreversible.
This article was first published in Africa Tomorrow, the blog of the ISS’s African Futures programme.
Jakkie Cilliers, Head, African Futures and Innovation, ISS Pretoria
Read the original article on ISS.
AllAfrica publishes around 500 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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Africa: Risks Persist, Especially for Africa, With U.S. Tariff Pause, Says WTO Chief Okonjo-Iweala

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Geneva — The head of the World Trade Organization says a temporary tariff pause by the United States mitigates current trade contraction, but substantial downside risks persist, which can heavily impact Africa.
WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala released the Global Trade Outlook at the WTO on April 16, warning of global dangers with the U.S. and China “decoupling” their economies.
She said at a press conference that the world’s merchandise trade volume will likely fall by 0.2 percent in 2025 under current conditions.
North America’s decline is expected to be particularly steep, and its exports are forecasted to drop by 12.6 percent, while Ngozi noted that some of Africa’s poorest countries, such as Lesotho, will be hard hit.
“A decoupling between the two major economies (the U.S. and China) could have far-reaching consequences if it were to contribute to a broader fragmentation of the global economy along geopolitical lines into two isolated blocks,” said Ngozi.
She said imposing “reciprocal” tariffs could lead to broader policy uncertainty, and these could trigger a sharper decline of 1.5 percent in global goods trade and hurt export-oriented least-developed countries (LDCs).
‘This is because Africa’s trade with the U.S. is relatively small’
“Exempting LDCs from all tariff increases would raise their exports, support their growth, and, in essence, help to create new markets,” said Ngozi.
She said that Africa’s economic outlook is broadly stable under current trade policies, with real GDP growth for the continent essentially unchanged, even if reciprocal tariffs are reinstated.
“This is because Africa’s trade with the U.S. is relatively small. The share of Africa’s exports to the U.S., as a percentage of its total exports to the world, is about 6.5 percent.”
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Ngozi said the share of Africa’s imports from the U.S. of its total imports is around 4.4 percent, with differences across countries.
“Some countries, like Lesotho, are particularly vulnerable due to their high reliance on textile exports to the U.S. market,” she observed.
Such exports are about $240 million or 10 percent of Lesotho’s. GDP,
“Cote d’Ivoire is another example. The largest cocoa producer in the world has about $800 million in exports to the U.S.,” said Ngozi.
Vulnerable to smuggling
U.S. tariffs can make Cote d’Ivoire’s cocoa vulnerable to smuggling to neighbouring Ghana, an “unintended consequence.”
“By 2050, 25 percent of the world’s population will be in Africa, whilst the present trade situation is being sorted out,” Ngozi said.
The Nigeria-born WTO chief pleaded for possible tariff exemptions for most of Africa since this is where most least developed countries are found.
Africa has 32 of the 44 least developed countries (LDCs), and Ngozi said that the continent needs “more self-reliance.”
“The external environment has changed and is more adverse. Aid is drying up, and trade is becoming more politicized,” said the WTO chief.
“So there needs to be a focus on raising domestic resources, attracting domestic regional and foreign investments on faster and greater trade integration within the continent, such that intra-Africa trade is lifted well beyond the current 16 percent,” said Ngozi.
She noted that Africa imports an estimated $7 billion of textiles, and Lesotho’s $240 million could be absorbed within Africa.
AllAfrica publishes around 500 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 500 news and information items daily from over 110 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
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Mongolia to deepen ties with Zambia

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By Mark Ziligone

Mongolian President UKHNAAGIIN KHURELSUKH has reaffirmed his country’s commitment to strengthening bilateral relations with Zambia.

President KHURELSUKH says his country will remain committed to international cooperation particularly through platforms such as the United Nations and other global organizations.

He has highlighted key areas for potential collaboration, including mining, agriculture, and tourism sectors adding that they are critical to the development agendas of both countries.

President KHURELSUKH was speaking when Zambia’s ambassador to Mongolia IVAN ZYUULU presented letters of credence to him at State House in Ulaanbaatar.

The Mongolian President welcomed the Ambassador and expressed confidence that the new envoy will help deepen the diplomatic and economic ties between Zambia and Mongolia.

And Mr. ZYUULU praised Mongolia’s expertise in mineral exploration and sustainable agriculture, expressing Zambia’s interest in drawing lessons and forming partnerships for mutual benefit.

Meanwhile Mongolia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, BATMUNKH BATTSETSEG reaffirmed his country’s readiness to work closely with Zambia and to explore new avenues of cooperation.

This is contained in a statement issued to ZNBC News by Second Secretary for Communications at the Zambian Embassy in Beijing, China CATHERINE KASHOTI.

The post Mongolia to deepen ties with Zambia appeared first on ZNBC-Just for you.

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Africa: Trump Wants World to Subsidise US Empire

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Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia — Donald Trump’s top economic advisor claims the President has weaponised tariffs to ‘persuade’ other nations to pay the US to maintain its supposedly mutually beneficial global empire.
Geopolitical economist Ben Norton was among the first to highlight the significance of Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers chairman Stephen Miran‘s briefing at the Hudson Institute.
The Institute is funded by financiers such as media czar Rupert Murdoch, who controls Fox News, The Wall Street Journal, and other conservative media.
Miran made his case just after Trump’s electoral victory in A User’s Guide to Restructuring the Global Trading System. Miran attempts to rationalise Trump’s economic policies, which are widely seen as at odds with conventional wisdom and reason.
Enhancing US dominance
Miran defends Trump’s tariffs as part of an ambitious economic strategy to strengthen US interests internationally with a “generational change in the international trade and financial systems”.
“Our military and financial dominance cannot be taken for granted, and the Trump administration is determined to preserve them”. Miran claims the US provides two major ‘global public goods’, both “costly to us to provide”.
First, Miran claims US military spending provides the world a ‘security umbrella’ that others should also pay for. Second, the US issues the dollar and Treasury bonds, the main reserve assets for the liquidity of the international monetary and financial system.
Miran seems blissfully unaware of longstanding complaints of US ‘exorbitant privilege’. The dollar’s reserve currency status has provided seigniorage income to the US while Treasury bond sales have long financed US debt at very low cost.
Miran’s case for Trump
The White House has threatened others with high tariffs unless they make concessions, at their own expense, benefiting the US. Miran’s defence of tariffs is indirect, as part of an ostensible grand strategy.
“The President has been clear that the United States is committed to remaining the reserve [currency] provider”, Miran added. He claims US dollar hegemony is “great” and denies “dollar dominance is a problem”.
While this “has some side effects, which can be problematic”, Miran “would like to … ameliorate the side effects, so that dollar dominance can continue for decades, in perpetuity”.
For Miran, these side effects are supposedly largely adverse while ignoring the benefits to the US. Chronic US trade deficits have been possible and financed by mounting US debt, enabling the dollar to serve as a global reserve currency.
Hence, US trade deficits have been sustained since the 1960s, rather than “unsustainable”, as he alleges. US manufacturing has been “decimated” by its consumers and transnational corporations, not by an extensive foreign conspiracy.
Miran’s Guide acknowledged the ‘Triffin dilemma’. In 1960, Robert Triffin warned that the dollar’s status as global reserve currency posed problems and risks for US monetary policy.
He invokes Triffin to argue that the US must import more than it exports to provide liquidity to the world, which needs dollars for international trade and to hold as reserves.
Miran adopts the Trumpian narrative of only blaming others. However, the US expected to benefit from continuing trade surpluses at Bretton Woods. In 1944, it opposed alternative payments arrangements to deter excessive trade surpluses.
US trade deficits have grown since the 1960s with post-World War II reconstruction of the Global North and uneven ‘late industrialisation’ in the Global South.
The empire must pay
The Trump administration wants to eat its cake and still have it. It intends to strengthen US empire while minimising adverse side effects and costs.
Miran wants foreign nations to “pay their fair share” in five ways. First, “countries should accept tariffs on their exports to the US without retaliation”. Tariffs provide revenue, which has financed its global public goods provision. Second, they should buy “more US-made goods”.
Third, they should “boost defense spending and procurement from the US”. Fourth, they should “invest in and install factories in America”. Fifth, they should “simply … help us finance global public goods”, i.e., foreign aid should go to or via the US.
Miran then emphasises that Trump “will no longer stand for other nations free-riding”, and calls for “improved burden-sharing at the global level”.
“If other nations want to benefit from the US geopolitical and financial umbrella, then they need to … pay their fair share”, i.e., the world must “bear the costs” of maintaining US empire.
Trump dilemmas 2.0
Trump wants to use tariffs to force countries with trade surpluses with the US to buy more from the US. Ending these deficits would undermine dollar hegemony, which, paradoxically, Trump obsessively wants to preserve.
Miran wants other countries to convert their US Treasury bills into 100-year bonds at very low interest rates, effectively subsidising the US over the long term. He also wants nations running trade surpluses with the US to buy more long-term US Treasury securities.
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Trump has threatened 100% tariffs on BRICS members and all countries promoting de-dollarisation or undermining dollar hegemony in the international monetary system.
During his first term, Trump wanted to do the near-impossible by boosting exports while preserving a strong dollar!
Miran acknowledges that the “root of the economic imbalances lies in persistent dollar overvaluation that prevents international trade balancing”. But he also insists that dollar “overvaluation is driven by inelastic demand for reserve assets”.
Trump now hopes to kill both US trade and fiscal deficit birds by cutting imports and raising revenue with higher tariffs. He also wants the world to continue using dollars despite the US budget and trade deficits and policy uncertainties.
Meanwhile, official US debt, financed by selling Treasury bonds, continues to grow. Trump has to deliver his promised tax cuts soon before his earlier measures run out. Trump is falling foul of his bluster and may have to revert to the status quo ante while denying it.
Despite Miran’s best efforts, he cannot provide a coherent rationale for Trump’s rhetoric. But dismissing Trump as ‘mad’ or ‘stupid’ obscures the impossible dilemma due to and obscured by post-war US dominance.
IPS UN Bureau
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Read the original article on IPS.
AllAfrica publishes around 500 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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