International development aid spending fell by more than one-fifth in real terms last year, the biggest dip on record. The US slashing its outlay by more than half set the tone, making Germany the largest overall donor.
https://p.dw.com/p/5Bw5uExpressed as a share of its overall economic clout, the US is now the least generous aid provider in the 34-member Development Assistance Commitee, according to OECD dataImage: Luis Tato/AFP/Getty ImagesAdvertisementInternational development aid fell by 23% in real terms in 2025 to the lowest levels since 2015, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) said on Thursday.
Preliminary data pointed to the largest dip in donations from members and associates of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) since records began.
For the first time on record, all five of the top international providers reduced their input.
The reduction was spearheaded by the world's richest country, the US, slashing its official development assistance spending by 56.9%, leaving Germany as the world's largest donor by default, even as it missed its own targets for international aid once again.
Refugee camps in Kenya feel impact of Donald Trump's cutsTo view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Some of the core statistics on official development aid spending from the 34 DAC members and other major countries were as follows:
What does the USAID pullback mean for young Africans?To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
"It's deeply concerning to see this huge drop in ODA in 2025, due to dramatic cuts among the very top donors," OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann said. "In this challenging environment, the significant decline in official development assistance highlights the need to maximise the impact of available resources, and to use them more effectively to unlock new sources of investment."
Carsten Staur, the chair of the OECD assistance committee told a news briefing on Thursday that "the message is extremely sombre."
The organization also forecasts a further, if more modest, decline of 5.8% in real terms in 2026. It said the atmosphere of sharp and continuing declines presented an "enormous shock to the system."
What the end of USAID means — Global UsTo view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Germany's ODA contributions shrank from 0.68% of GNI in 2024 to 0.56%, at a total of $29.09 billion. If you exclude refugee assistance funding spent inside Germany, that figure falls further to 0.46%, based on Development Ministry figures.
Yet still Germany became the largest overall donor in the world for the first time in history as the US, with an economy roughly six times the size of Germany's, slashed its spending.
The US remains the second largest donor in overall terms, with EU institutions next in line and the UK a fairly distant fourth.
Aid organizations criticized the government in Berlin while security expert Philipp Rotmann at the Global Public Policy Institute said the reductions were "not in Germany's security interests" given the "deadly gap" left by the US pullout, from which Russia and China would seek to profit geopolitically.
"The world's on fire and Germany continues to cut," Oxfam Germany chairwoman Charlotte Becker said, saying the reductions had life-threatening consequences.
Church charities like Brot für die Welt, Misereor, Caritas International and Diakonie issued a joint statement decrying a "dangerous downward spiral" in spending.
Kofler: German aid can't fill gap left by US cutsTo view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Net bilateral aid to wartorn Ukraine from DAV members fell by 38.2% last year, according to OECD figures. This was driven by a sharp US dip as Trump returned to the White House, even as 23 countries increased bilateral contributions.
However, because of new support via EU institutions in Brussels rather than member states, overall donations to Ukraine totaled $44.9 billion, an 18.7% increase on 2024 that bucked the overall trend and "the largest volume of net ODA to any single recipient in any year on record," the OECD said.
"This amount was larger than DAC members' combined bilateral ODA to all less developed countries ($28.1 billion) and all countries in sub-Saharan Africa ($29.2 billion)," it said.
The reduction in donations was most sharp in bilateral development assistance, falling 26.4%. Multilateral ODA spending levels fell by 12.7%. The volume of bilateral development grants fell much more sharply (down 29.3%) than bilateral spending on loans (down 10.3%).