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Aid Cuts Spark Catastrophic Global Health Crisis
3 Feb
Summary
- 22.6 million preventable deaths feared by 2030 due to aid cuts.
- Child mortality projected to increase significantly without aid.
- Aid funding was previously linked to lower death rates.

A significant reduction in humanitarian and development aid from high-income nations could result in a catastrophic increase in preventable deaths, with projections indicating up to 22.6 million deaths by 2030 in Low and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs). This alarming figure includes an estimated 5.4 million deaths among children under five years old.
This projected crisis follows a trend observed in 2024, marking the first time in nearly three decades that major donors, excluding Japan, decreased their contributions. Preliminary forecasts suggest further substantial cuts, with an overall decline of over 11 percent anticipated between 2025 and 2026.
Historically, increased funding for Official Development Assistance (ODA) has been directly associated with significant reductions in mortality rates. The study highlights a 23 percent decrease in all-cause mortality and a 39 percent drop in under-five mortality linked to higher funding levels.
Furthermore, ODA has been instrumental in curbing deaths from communicable diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria, as well as reducing mortality from tuberculosis and maternal-perinatal causes. The authors caution that sudden and severe aid reductions could have consequences comparable to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Even a mild decrease in funding, extending current downward trends, is expected to cause sharp rises in preventable adult and child mortality, potentially leading to tens of millions of excess deaths in the coming years. This underscores the critical role ODA plays in global health outcomes.




