U.S. President Donald Trump’s order to suspend most foreign aid has sent shock waves through the humanitarian sector, threatening to trigger mass layoffs at many NGOs and possibly destroy others altogether.
Less than a week after Trump returned to power, the U.S. Agency for International Development said NGOs they would have to cease operations immediately because the new administration had frozen USAID’s budgets.
The U.S. president has ordered a 90-day review of USAID — which runs health and emergency programmes in around 120 countries, including the world’s poorest.
The campaign is being spearheaded by his billionaire ally Elon Musk, who has boasted of feeding USAID “through the wood-chipper.”
Trump’s administration has since issued waivers for some “life-saving” aid, while the freeze included exceptions to funding for Israel and Egypt.
But confusion reigns over how those waivers will be implemented and the uncertainty has already taken its toll.
The order to stop work immediately hit “like a bombshell,” said a source at an NGO in Kenya.
He asked to remain anonymous out of fear his charity could be punished by the Trump administration.
“It threw people into panic mode,” the aid worker said of the freeze, pointing out that the lack of notice meant staff had no time to adapt.
They were instantly put on compulsory unpaid leave and the organization was no longer able to pay their rents or salaries, he said.
“What’s that going to mean for people who have children?” he asked, aghast.
Impossible to compensate
According to aid network ALNAP, more than 630,000 people were employed in the aid sector in 2020, more than 90 per cent of them local staff.
For many locals, the U.S. freeze spells unemployment in countries with fragile economies where finding another job is almost impossible.
Expatriates working for aid agencies also face disruption.
“We notified everyone on U.S. budgets that they had been suspended temporarily,” said a source at the European headquarters of an NGO mostly financed by U.S. funds.
The consequence for expatriates, she said on condition of anonymity, is that “they put you on a plane and you go back home.”
Except, she added, “you don’t necessarily have a home” because many expat aid workers go from mission to mission, with no home base in their country of origin.
USAID manages a budget of $42.8 billion — representing 42 per cent of humanitarian aid disbursed worldwide.
NGOs will have to “lay off employees in proportion to their dependence on U.S. funds,” she said.
“If an NGO depends 60 per cent on USAID, it will have to lay off 60 per cent of its employees. If it depends 40 per cent, it will lay off 40 per cent.”
It would be “impossible to compensate for the loss of U.S. funds,” she said.
‘Brutal’
The Norwegian Refugee Council, one of the world’s largest aid agencies, said on Monday it was forced to abruptly suspend U.S.-funded “urgent humanitarian work for hundreds of thousands of people in nearly 20 countries affected by wars, disasters and displacement.”
Just under 20 per cent — $150 million — of its funding came from the United States last year, providing vital support for 1.6 million people.
While the initial U.S. funding freeze was set to last 90 days, the administration has already begun slashing USAID’s workforce, and many in the aid sector fear a drastic long-term drop in U.S. support.
Trump and Musk have publicly vowed to shutter USAID for good.
“We’re not so vulnerable that we’ll just fold in 90 days. The problem is, will this last 90 days or go on much longer?” said Kevin Goldberg, head of Solidarites International, which is 36 per cent U.S.-funded.
Local partners of international NGOs, “who depend on our ability to transfer part of the U.S. aid allocated to us,” would also suffer, he added.
Goldberg said he “feared for the entire humanitarian chain.”
“There are a lot of players in the aid sector that will disappear” because European state funding is also decreasing, warned Jean-Francois Corty, head of Medecins du Monde.
He said the U.S. decision was an “apocalyptic revolution” for a humanitarian ecosystem that was “being … strangled to death.”
An executive from another international NGO said she feared the “brutal” Trump method would have repercussions in Europe, where far-right parties drawing from the U.S. president’s playbook are gaining ground.
“This earthquake … forces us to rethink everything,” she said.Attach

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