United States | Foreign aid

What happened next at USAID

A textbook case of how not to cut wasteful government spending

Food provided by the USAID  arrives in Bentiu, South Sudan
System errorPhotograph: Jim Huylebroek/ New York Times/ Redux/ Eyevine
|Lilongwe and Cape Town

ON JANUARY 28th the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, issued an “emergency humanitarian waiver” to exempt life-saving aid from Donald Trump’s freeze on all foreign assistance. Two weeks later, in Malawi, a country of 20m in southern Africa that is the world’s seventh-poorest by GDP per person, most local charities have stopped working and about 5,000 people—many of them health workers—have lost their jobs, says Mazisayko Matemba of the Health and Rights Education Programme, an NGO. “We expect more people to get infections and start dying.”

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Long knives”

From the February 15th 2025 edition

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