
UK and US aid cuts 'may reverse global progress by 30 years'
Davide Rasella, a co-author of the report and researcher at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health, told the BBC that cutting funding for the US Agency for International Development (USAID) risked 'abruptly halting – and even reversing – two decades of progress in health among vulnerable populations'.
READ MORE: Donald Trump to 'visit Turnberry golf course during visit to Scotland'
On January 20, 2025, the Trump administration announced Executive Order 14169, which suspended existing foreign aid programmes, with the exception of military aid and emergency food assistance.
In March, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that 83% of all USAID programmes would be cut in a bid to slash 'wasteful spending'.
In a post on social media, Rubio claimed that USAID had cost the United States 'tens of billions of dollars' and 'did not serve or in some cases harmed' American national interests.
The new study in the Lancet was based on Rubio's announcement of an 83% reduction in funding, which led researchers to conclude that the cuts would result in more than 2.4 million additional deaths annually.
READ MORE: Scots back independence as Keir Starmer's popularity at record low, new poll finds
The report – which was ultimately funded by the EU, UK, and Spanish governments – found that over the last two decades, USAID support has helped to save over 90 million lives, including over 30 million children, in low-income and middle-income nations.
It stated: 'According to the forecasting models, the current steep funding cuts – coupled with the potential dissolution of the agency – could lead to more than 14 million additional deaths by 2030, averaging more than 2-4 million deaths per year.
'These deaths include 4-5 million among children younger than 5 years, or more than 700,000 deaths annually.'
Humanitarian organisations have voiced serious concerns about the lack of notice regarding the cuts. Without adequate time to implement adaptive measures, they warn of 'severe' and 'profound' consequences for public health, economic development and societal stability.
Far-right Tesla chief executive Elon Musk (Image: JIM WATSON, AFP via Getty Images) The cuts to USAID were managed by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) in an attempt to reduce the federal workforce, a move which has been widely condemned by humanitarian organisations worldwide. Musk described the decision as 'tough but necessary'.
The publication of the Lancet report comes as a United Nations aid conference gets underway in Seville. With some 50 world leaders expected to attend to discuss global inequality, the financial loss of USAID is sure to be high on the agenda. The United States, however, is not expected to attend.
President Trump's cuts to USAID have caused a global knock-on effect, with the UK, France, Netherlands and Belgium having unveiled their own cuts to international aid of 40%, 37%, 30%, and 25% respectively.
'These decreases not only threaten to reverse three decades of unprecedented human progress, but also intensifies the extraordinary uncertainty and vulnerability already caused by the ongoing polycrisis,' the study states.
US president Donald TrumpIt further warns that the collective reduction in international funding has the potential to push the sector to the 'brink of collapse'.
The United States had been the leading government donor to humanitarian programmes for the last twenty years, and accounted for 43% of all government humanitarian funding in 2023.
By 2024, USAID was responsible for a 65% reduction in the number of deaths from HIV/AIDS, equating to over 25 million lives saved, the study said.
The United Nations secretary-general Antonio Guterres urged the US government to reconsider, and stated the cuts would make the world 'less healthy, less safe, and less prosperous'.
The USAID began under President John F Kennedy in 1961, who told Congress it was America's 'moral' and 'economic' obligation as a wealthy nation to assist struggling countries across the globe.
Speaking to the Associated Press, former president Barack Obama called the shut down of USAID a 'travesty' and a 'tragedy'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
38 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Donald Trump branded a ‘baby with a hand grenade in shop specialising in glass'
The unflattering description of the US President from Neil Kinnock came as the ex-Labour leader hit out at the Mr Trump's 'completely inexcusable' global tariff policy. Donald Trump has been branded a "baby with a hand grenade in a shop specialising in crockery and glass". The unflattering description of the US President from Neil Kinnock came as the ex-Labour leader hit out at the Mr Trump's "completely inexcusable" global tariff policy. He warned it will inflict "terrible damage" on world trade and the American public. But he praised Keir Starmer, who has negotiated a deal with the US, for "playing a very, very difficult hand, extremely well" in relations with the erratic American President. Lord Kinnock said: "It's a recognition of where Britain really is in the modern world. The Prime Minister knows when he's dealing with a capricious, immature, ultimately powerful man, then he's not dealing with anything remotely normal in international relations. "He knows Donald Trump could on a tantrum and inflict terrible damage on our country. If he can keep Trump near stability and consistency he's done very well." It comes as Mr Trump prepares to jet to the UK on Air Force Once for an "unprecedented" second state visit in September. He was handed the invitation from King Charles during his first face-to-face meeting with Mr Starmer in the Oval Office back in February. Asked whether the PM was right to extend the invitation, Lord Kinnock told The Mirror: "We use whatever means we have." Recalling a tip from his late wife, Glenys Kinnock, he said: "I remember I had broken the radiator belt in my mini, and Glenys came up with a brilliant idea of using her tights, which I did, and it got us home. "The tights, I could tie them tight enough to replicate the belt. And got me home. International politics is a bit like that with Donald Trump around. "I mean he's a baby with a hand grenade in a shop specialising in crockery and glass." He added: "He's got to be dealt with in the same way that the brave people who defuse bombs do it. Quite extraordinary in their courage. Keir doesn't have to show quite the level of bravery, but he's got to be just as delicate with his spanner and his screwdriver."


Economist
40 minutes ago
- Economist
Fear and dread of a new Oval Office fiasco over Ukraine
TIME DIFFERENCES meant that most Ukrainians only learned about the Alaska summit on Saturday morning. Though their initial reaction was relief, now they are dreading what comes next. The immediate sigh of calm was understandable. The feared grand bargain in Anchorage between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin had not materialised. Initial reports highlighted that the talks at an American military base were truncated and lacked any clear outcome. 'Disaster averted: Trump has not sold us down the river,' commented one MP early yesterday morning.


Sunday Post
an hour ago
- Sunday Post
SNP admits promised hearing care cash already spent elsewhere
Get a weekly round-up of stories from The Sunday Post: Thank you for signing up to our Sunday Post newsletter. Something went wrong - please try again later. Sign Up Thousands of Scots will be left to suffer in silence after the SNP abandoned a manifesto pledge to overhaul hearing services, we can reveal. Scottish Government ministers have been branded a 'disgrace' after admitting they will not deliver on a promise made before the last Holyrood election to raise community audiology services on a par with eye care. We revealed previously how experts believe that Scotland's ballooning backlog for hearing services could be cleared for just £9 million by switching to a community model – which would mean moving some care from hospitals to the high street. Specsavers, one of the country's largest private providers, said it could wipe out the delay in just three years with no capital expenditure or other set-up costs for the NHS. But last night furious political rivals demanded action after the SNP's public health minister, Jenni Minto, admitted money that should have been ringfenced for community hearing care had already been spent elsewhere. No more cash left In a letter to Conservative MSP Douglas Lumsden, seen by The Sunday Post, Minto acknowledged too many people are still waiting too long for health appointments and insisted the government is determined to do more. She said ministers are continuing to focus delivery on the action required to respond to a damning independent review of services from two years ago. However, she admitted there is simply no more cash to roll out a community hearing service. In one section, Minto states: 'We acknowledge the impact of unaddressed hearing loss on cognitive decline, levels of loneliness, isolation and unemployment' adding that the government 'remains committed to enhancing audiology services, and to its vision for an integrated, community-based audiology service. © Sandy McCook / DC Thomson 'You will be aware that unfortunately, the rephasing of funds has meant that not all challenges in primary care can be addressed in a single budget and no provision has been made for a community hearing service at this time.' Official records show at least 71,000 patients were added to audiology waiting lists last year – although the true figure is likely to be much higher as NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde said its 'very old' system prevented it from providing details. Some people have faced waits of up to three and a half years to access hearing loss treatment on the NHS, despite experts warning it could lead to isolation and life-changing health complications. We have reported previously how routine hearing care could reduce falls among older adults by almost a third, as well as warnings of a link between hearing loss and dementia. Calls for community audiology Politicians have long urged the Scottish Government to pilot community-based audiology services, similar to those used for optometry. Schemes like that are already running in England and a number of other countries. But in Scotland, an independent probe into audiology services in 2023 uncovered systemic failures and raised concerns over staffing and the quality of testing to identify deafness in very young children. Clinicians previously warned that the government could try to use the review as an excuse to 'kick down the road' its pledge to implement a community service. Lumsden, an MSP for the North East region, described Minto's response as 'yet another broken promise in the SNP's woeful manifesto'. © DC Thomson He said: 'The response from Jenni Minto is nothing short of disgraceful at a time when thousands of patients are having to suffer in silence. 'SNP ministers have forced patients to seek private audiology appointments because of their failure to bring down the appalling waiting times that exist across our NHS. 'Grampian, which has longer waiting lists and an older demographic than other parts of the country, would be the ideal place for a pilot into community audiology care. 'We provided common-sense solutions that would drastically cut waiting times for children and vulnerable older people with potential hearing loss, but the SNP have snubbed it with little care for those who desperately need the help. 'Rather than sweeping this serious issue under the carpet, the SNP must heed our calls by properly investing in frontline care to make our health service accessible for all who need it.'