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Crossposted from a special series we did at Asterisk

As of this writing, USAID, the world’s largest foreign assistance agency, appears to be effectively dead.

This does not mean the end of American foreign assistance entirely. Indeed, the Trump Administration’s FY2026 budget request still proposes $3.8 billion in global health spending — a greater than 60% reduction from years previous. But we’ve reached what is unquestionably the end of a modern era of international development. It remains to be seen in what form, under which department, and to what causes new foreign assistance will take.

In the interim, the loss of USAID programming is already being felt, from the closure of HIV centers in South Africa to the cessation of anti-malaria programs in Sierra Leone to the shuttering of nutrition clinics in Bangladesh. The impacts will continue to be felt over the coming years. We wanted to know: How big will they be?

For this special feature, we commissioned forecasts on increased mortality as the result of USAID disruptions across five of its programmatic areas:

  1. PEPFAR
  2. Malaria
  3. Severe acute malnutrition
  4. Tuberculosis
  5. Water, sanitation, and hygiene

We first assigned these forecasts during a period in which it appeared that foreign aid might be reduced to effectively zero. After substantial outcry, some funding has been reinstated. Charles Kenny and Justin Sandefur,1 of the Center for Global Development, have compiled estimates of total USAID cuts by sector and by country. Some areas, such as infrastructure and civil society, appear likely to be hollowed out entirely. Others, like maternal health and agriculture, may continue at only a tenth of their previous funding. The most critical programming, at least in terms of immediate mortality impacts, such as PEPFAR, malaria, and nutrition assistance, appear likely to persist, albeit in a heavily reduced form — around 70% of its previous funding for HIV/AIDS, 50% for TB, and 40% for nutrition.

Our goal in this series is, first and foremost, to understand the possible human impact of USAID cuts. But we also want to be transparent in the process by which we’ve arrived at these estimates. Historically, foreign aid has been among the least popular areas of government spending, but specific areas — food security, poverty relief, and healthcare — remain widely supported. We’ve published critiques of USAID programs in the past, but we believe the life-saving impacts, especially of its most cost-effective programs, remain under-appreciated. We think quantifying those impacts — transparently and probabilistically — is critical to the conversations happening now and in the future over whether these programs should be restored.

We estimate that the combined impact of the projected cuts to these five programs will result in between 483,000 and 1.14 million excess deaths over one year.

If cuts were to persist over five years, we may expect those numbers to increase to between 1.48 million and 6.24 million deaths.2 For specific details, see links to each forecast below.

Jared Leibowich estimates that PEPFAR cuts will lead to between 257,000 and 772,000 deaths in the next year, and between 1.01 million and 2.95 million deaths over the next four years.

Bruce Tsai estimates that cuts to malaria programming will result in between 43,000 and 90,000 deaths in the next year, and 250,000 to 410,000 deaths over the next five years.

Kati Conen estimates cuts to TB programming will result in 98,000 to 184,000 deaths in the next year, and 900,000 to 2.5 million deaths over five years.

Lauren Gilbert and Anna Gordon estimate cuts to nutrition programming will result in 79,000 to 89,000 deaths from severe acute malnutrition in the next year, and between 300,000 and 338,000 deaths over five years.

Erin Braid estimates cuts to WASH programming will result in 5,850 deaths in the next year, and 26,930 deaths over five years.

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Thanks for comissioning this work and sharing it. 

I found your comments about the methodology a bit confusing. Are these estimates for what the impact would have been, if PEPFAR hadn't been largely restored, or what it actually will be?

We first assigned these forecasts during a period in which it appeared that foreign aid might be reduced to effectively zero. After substantial outcry, some funding has been reinstated. Charles Kenny and Justin Sandefur,1 of the Center for Global Development, have compiled estimates of total USAID cuts by sector and by country. Some areas, such as infrastructure and civil society, appear likely to be hollowed out entirely. Others, like maternal health and agriculture, may continue at only a tenth of their previous funding. The most critical programming, at least in terms of immediate mortality impacts, such as PEPFAR, malaria, and nutrition assistance, appear likely to persist, albeit in a heavily reduced form — around 70% of its previous funding for HIV/AIDS, 50% for TB, and 40% for nutrition.

...

We estimate that the combined impact of the projected cuts to these five programs will result in between 483,000 and 1.14 million excess deaths over one year.

Speaking just for myself (RE: malaria), the topline figures include adjustments for various estimates around how much USAID funding might be reinstated, as well as discounts for redistribution / compensation by other actors, rather than forecasting an 100% cut over the entire time periods (which was the initial brief, and a reasonable starting point at the time but became less likely to be a good assumption by the time of publication).

My 1 year / 5 year estimates without these discounts are approx. 130k to 270k and 720k to 1.5m respectively.

Yes it'swhat it would have been based on the original cuts. Things completely different now that funding for medication has been restored. The predictions of malaria and HIV deaths resulting from the cuts would now be slashed I would guess by over 80 percent I think because the numbers were based on medication shortages.

As an epidemiologist, the projected mortality from USAID cuts is deeply concerning to me but not surprising given how essential these programs are for disease control and health system stability. Beyond immediate deaths, we should consider how these disruptions could fuel longer-term consequences like increased antimicrobial resistance and loss of community trust in healthcare, which often go overlooked in mortality forecasts. This highlights the urgent need for not only restoring funding but also strengthening local health resilience to withstand such shocks in the future.

How does this impact how we should prioritise private donor charitable giving? Are there high impact initiatives that now lack funding in the space vacated by USAID and other aid cuts?

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