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Home»Economic News»The case for persisting with foreign aid
Economic News

The case for persisting with foreign aid

February 11, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.

It is disgusting to read the boast of the world’s richest man that “we spent the weekend feeding USAID into the wood chipper”. That this raises constitutional and legal issues for the US republic is quite clear. Indeed, it is evident that those now in charge would be quite happy to dispose of such tiresome constraints altogether. But there are also moral issues. Should the US effort to succour the world’s poorest have been fed into a “woodchipper” at all? The answer is “no”.

As Paul Krugman notes in an exceptional recent piece on his Substack, the US made a huge effort after the second world war to be a new and different sort of great power: it sought to create allies, not tributaries; economic development, not predation; global institutions, not imperial rule; and international law, not the old idea of “might makes right”. There was, inevitably, much backsliding. But in all, the US has indeed been a strikingly benign and successful hegemon.

The explosive growth of world trade, the rise of once-impoverished China and India, the peaceful fall of the Soviet Union and, not least, the decline in the proportion of human beings living in extreme poverty — from 59 per cent in 1950 to 8.5 per cent in 2024, despite a tripling of the world population — are proof of its success. The US should be hugely proud of its achievements as world leader, and not seek to imitate the bullying of Vladimir Putin’s Russia, instead. (See charts.)





Line chart of Per cent of global population living in extreme poverty*  showing The fall in the share of people  in extreme poverty is a triumph

The US Agency for International Development, then, is part of something far bigger. The US also played a decisive role in the creation of the World Bank, the IMF, the UN, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the International Development Association and Nato — unambiguously, both then and now, a defensive alliance.

The underlying idea was that the world would be a better place if we recognised our shared interest in peaceful co-operation. Why would anyone wish to sacrifice this ideal for a return to the 19th-century competition among imperialist great powers that culminated in two world wars, Stalinism and fascism? Do pathogens or the climate recognise international borders? Is war among nuclear powers even thinkable? Can any country truly be an island? Can humanity, having trashed this planet, really find rescue on the barren planet of Mars?





Column chart of Average annual reduction in extreme poverty rates* (% points) showing Reductions in extreme poverty have slowed sharply since the pandemic

The onslaught on USAID is a token of the madness now overwhelming the US. But it is revealing. Its budget was 0.7 per cent of federal spending and 0.15 per cent of GDP in the 2023 fiscal year. Its destruction is above all symbolic. According to Musk, USAID is a “viper’s nest of radical-left marxists who hate America”. USAID spends on things like Aids relief and family planning in the world’s poorest countries. So, what radical-left Marxist launched the President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief? George W Bush, that’s who. Even if this onslaught proves just an interruption, it will do much damage.





Line chart of Cumulative change in per capita income relative to the pre-pandemic trend (%) showing Big shortfalls in incomes have hit poor countries since the pandemic

Unfortunately, this comes at a bad time for economic development. As the World Bank’s latest Global Economic Prospects notes, not only is global economic growth slowing, but the performance of low-income developing countries has become particularly worrying.

“Catch-up toward advanced economy income levels has steadily weakened across [emerging market and developing economies] over the first quarter of the 21st century,” the report argues. This is the result of successive shocks, slowing reforms and a more adverse external environment, characterised in large part by “heightened policy uncertainty and adverse trade policy shifts”.





Line chart of GDP per capita relative to advanced economies (% of advanced economy level)  showing The divergence among erstwhile low-income countries is startling

“Rapid growth underpinned by domestic reforms and a benign global environment allowed many low-income countries . . . to attain middle-income rank in the first decade of this century. Since then, the rate at which low-income countries are graduating to middle-income status has slowed markedly.” Growth in real incomes per head in these countries has simply become anaemic. That is partly because of internal conflict and partly because of adverse external developments, including the global financial crisis, the pandemic, unexpected jumps in prices of essential commodities and higher interest rates.





Bar chart of Economies experiencing intense conflict (% of countries) showing The share of low-income countries suffering from conflict has jumped

As a result, argues the report, across a wide array of development metrics, today’s low-income countries are behind where the ones that subsequently became middle-income were in 2000. They are also now more susceptible to shocks related to climate change.

In considering the plight of the poorest countries it is necessary to understand the constraints upon them. They lack the resources to provide healthcare or needed martin.wolf@ft.com. Stay updated with Martin Wolf on myFT and Twitter. following sentence:

The cat chased the mouse around the house.

The mouse was chased by the cat throughout the house.

aid case foreign persisting
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