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Rich nations' overseas development aid drops by 23% in 2025, says OECD

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on April 9, 2026

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· Last updated: April 10, 2026

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By Duncan Miriri NAIROBI, April 9 (Reuters) - Overseas development aid from the world's richest nations to poorer countries dropped by 23.1% year-on-year in 2025 to $174.3 billion, the biggest ever

Rich nations' overseas development aid drops by 23% in 2025, says OECD

OECD Reports Historic Decline in Overseas Development Assistance

By Duncan Miriri

NAIROBI, April 9 (Reuters) - Overseas development aid from the world's richest nations to poorer countries dropped by 23.1% in 2025 to $174.3 billion, the biggest ever year-on-year reduction, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said on Thursday.

Key Findings from the OECD Development Assistance Committee

The OECD's Development Assistance Committee, which includes the United States, Japan and the European Union, reported a drop in provision of assistance by 26 out of its 34 member countries, mainly due to political and fiscal pressures in their own economies. 

"The message is extremely sombre," Carsten Staur, the chair of the OECD assistance committee, told a news briefing.

Impact of U.S. Aid Reduction

The U.S. alone drove three-quarters of the decline, the organisation said, with assistance falling by the largest reduction by any provider in any year on record.

"The scale of the decline by the United States meant that Germany became the largest provider of overseas development assistance for the first time," it said. 

President Donald Trump has been cutting U.S. contributions to various institutions and has closed the U.S. aid agency.

Washington cut its development assistance to Ukraine sharply last year, the OECD said, but increased funding by EU institutions led to an increase on the previous year in net terms.

Other Major Donors and Their Contributions

Significant Cuts by Germany, France, Britain, and Japan

OTHER DONOR NATIONS CUT FUNDING SIGNIFICANTLY

Germany, France, Britain and Japan, which normally make up the top five donors, also cut their assistance significantly during the year, the OECD added. 

Breakdown of Overseas Development Assistance (ODA)

The provisional data measures overseas development assistance (ODA) - government aid given to poorer countries to support their economic development and welfare. The final data is usually released in December.

The data also includes funding for some United Nations development projects, as well as for multilateral development banks. Such funding to the UN dropped by more than a quarter while the World Bank saw its funding increase, OECD said.

Implications for Recipient Nations

The cash has become increasingly important to recipient nations, said Mathias Cormann, the secretary general of the OECD, as they wrestle with an increase in expensive debt.

"Official development assistance helps countries manage some of these pressures," he said, adding that some components of the funding also attract private capital into projects.

Regional Impact: Africa and Least Developed Countries

Bilateral aid to African states, and those classified as least developed countries including in other regions, also dropped by more than a fifth during the period, the OECD said.

Potential Solutions and Future Projections

Cormann said one answer to the decline in funding is for governments to strengthen their tax collection efforts, adding that the organisation is working with Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Kenya and Tunisia to strengthen their resource mobilisation.

OECD projected a 5.8% decline in overseas development assistance this year, without accounting for any shocks from the war in Iran, it said.

(Reporting by Duncan Miriri, editing by Karin Strohecker and Hugh Lawson)

Key Takeaways

  • ODA from OECD’s DAC fell 23.1% in 2025 to $174.3 billion, marking the steepest single-year drop on record. The U.S. accounted for three‑quarters of the decline, enabling Germany to become the largest donor. (oecd.org)
  • Projections had already anticipated a 9–17% decline in ODA in 2025 following a 9% fall in 2024, with a downside scenario suggesting as much as $170 billion in total aid. (oecd.org)
  • Least developed countries and sub‑Saharan Africa are facing deep cuts—bilateral ODA to LDCs could fall 13–25%, and to sub‑Saharan Africa 16–28% in 2025—raising alarm over the impact on vulnerable regions. (oecd.org)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

How much did overseas development aid from rich nations drop in 2025?
Overseas development aid from the world's richest nations dropped by 23.1% in 2025 to $174.3 billion.
Which country contributed most to the decline in overseas aid?
The United States drove three-quarters of the decline in overseas development assistance in 2025.
Who became the largest provider of overseas development assistance in 2025?
Germany became the largest provider of overseas development assistance for the first time in 2025.
How many OECD member countries reduced their overseas development assistance?
26 out of 34 OECD member countries reported a drop in overseas development assistance in 2025.
What is measured by the OECD's provisional data for this report?
The provisional data measures overseas development assistance (ODA), which is government aid given to poorer countries to support their economic development and welfare.

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