Breaking
CN國道一號彰化戰備道大貨車事故 貨物散落致全線封閉BRMães temem interrupção de terapias após esvaziamento de centro para autistas em Boa VistaCN印太戰略智庫執行長矢板明夫在台中遭中國籍男子揮拳攻擊VNNgười tình bị tạm giữ vì hành hạ con gái 3 tuổiGLOBALFIFA Rejects Belgium's Challenge on Balogun's Eligibility for US vs. BelgiumBRMulher investigada por furto de bilhete premiado diz que não consegue empregoBRRegião de Bauru registra mais de 10 casos de violência doméstica em um único domingoBRMecânico é encontrado morto após sumir por 10 dias na BahiaBRJoalheria em shopping de BH é furtada em R$ 900 mil; suspeito entrou pelo tetoBRAdvogados de SP são investigados por apropriação de valores de clientesCN國道一號彰化戰備道大貨車事故 貨物散落致全線封閉BRMães temem interrupção de terapias após esvaziamento de centro para autistas em Boa VistaCN印太戰略智庫執行長矢板明夫在台中遭中國籍男子揮拳攻擊VNNgười tình bị tạm giữ vì hành hạ con gái 3 tuổiGLOBALFIFA Rejects Belgium's Challenge on Balogun's Eligibility for US vs. BelgiumBRMulher investigada por furto de bilhete premiado diz que não consegue empregoBRRegião de Bauru registra mais de 10 casos de violência doméstica em um único domingoBRMecânico é encontrado morto após sumir por 10 dias na BahiaBRJoalheria em shopping de BH é furtada em R$ 900 mil; suspeito entrou pelo tetoBRAdvogados de SP são investigados por apropriação de valores de clientes
Newsgather
BackForeign Aid Withdrawal Linked to Increased Conflict in Africa, Study Finds
Foreign Aid Withdrawal Linked to Increased Conflict in Africa, Study Finds
Developing
NPR News5/19/2026World4 min readUnited States

Foreign Aid Withdrawal Linked to Increased Conflict in Africa, Study Finds

Quick Look

  • A study in Science links the termination of USAID to a surge in violence in Africa, as reduced livelihoods and resources created incentives for conflict.
  • Protests at a Kenyan refugee camp exemplify the findings.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Foreign aid can have complex effects on conflict, potentially reducing incentives for violence by providing jobs and resources, but also increasing conflict by creating resources to fight over. The termination of USAID provided a unique opportunity to study the impact of aid withdrawal.

Font size

Does foreign aid have an impact on violence — on wars, on street fights, on random attacks?

The answer is that yes, it does — in two opposite, and perhaps counterintuitive, ways. On the one hand, aid can provide jobs and resources. And that, in turn, can reduce the incentives for people to engage in violent actions.

Yet it can have the reverse effect as well. "Aid can also increase conflict by introducing something to fight over," says Austin Wright, a data scientist at the University of Chicago who works at the intersection of public policy and statistics. He's referring to resources like roads and supplies paid for by the foreign assistance. In other words, "things that are of value to control."

The termination of USAID — America's premiere aid agency — gave researchers another angle to explore. Does the sudden withdrawal of aid funding have an impact on conflict?

In a study published in the journal Science, Wright and his colleagues conclude that the abrupt dismantling of USAID led to an uptick in overall conflict in places within Africa that have received aid compared to those that have not.

"The rapid collapse of what is probably the most sophisticated humanitarian assistance program in human history had enormous consequences on the ground, undermining livelihoods and therefore leading to a surge in violence," Wright concludes.

The near instantaneous evaporation of assistance "took away the livelihoods, it undermined economic productivity," he explains, thereby weakening the incentives that people might have to refrain from violence. And at the same time, "it did not yet eliminate what the actors were fighting over. And so this is what creates the chaos and the violence that we end up observing."

By way of example, Wright refers to protests that broke out at the Kakuma refugee camp in northwest Kenya in July 2025. The roughly 300,000 refugees there depended on food and other services paid for by USAID. Wright says, "After the cuts, food distributions were sharply reduced, and refugees took to the streets," throwing rocks and setting things on fire. One person was killed. "It is exactly the kind of incident our results capture."

NPR reached out to the U.S. State Department for comment. Spokesperson Tommy Pigott replied in part, "One of the biggest problems with this 'report' is that it fundamentally ignores what is actually happening in Africa. The Trump administration has made unprecedented progress towards the advancement of peace on the continent. Unlike the previous administration … the Trump administration has reinvigorated our assistance programs to focus on efficiency, effectiveness, and partnership."

The interplay of aid and conflict

The researchers considered a map of USAID funds disbursed at the state or provincial level preceding the termination of the agency.

"And then we overlay that with conflict activity," he says, in the form of armed clashes, protests, riots and violence against civilians. These data from the ten months before and after early 2025 came from a detailed independent database of violent conflict called the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data. "So we don't just see that a conflict occurred in a place," Wright says. "We see exactly when the conflict occurred."

And they looked to see how any change in that violent activity may have corresponded to the elimination of USAID investments.

The team found that places that once received more assistance tended to experience more conflict once that aid abruptly disappeared, often because those who had relied on that aid had become more vulnerable to recruitment by armed groups. "When aid is withdrawn suddenly, the economic opportunities disappear fast: wages dry up, clinics close, food programs stop," explains Wright.

"But the things worth fighting over (infrastructure, territory, political power, ethnic grievances, geopolitical tensions) don't vanish overnight," he continues. That meant that in the short term, loss of opportunities, alongside an animation of the individual motivations to fight, caused violence to increase.

In addition, the conflict included combat between armed groups, public demonstrations that spontaneously turned hostile, and deliberate acts of violence that targeted noncombatants — such as rebels attacking a village.

Wright thinks of the conflict arising in environments that are low on economic opportunity but high on grievance. "This is an arrow that points directly at the timing of the shutdown," he says.

The findings are "convincing"

The one exception that he and his colleagues found was in places with government that support stronger constraints on the executive leader. These are "settings where the president or equivalent actor cannot unilaterally declare war [or] bypass elected congressional bodies," says Wright.

Such institutions helped their constituents weather the storm of the sudden funding withdrawal. This meant that there was less of an impact on conflict there. Wright cites Nigeria's $200 million supplementary health budget and South Africa's decision to help cover gaps in AIDS and HIV treatment as two examples.

Researchers not involved in the study caution this is a challenging topic to study. "Conflict and the sources of conflict — it's very complex," says Andy Solow, a statistician at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution who wasn't involved in the study. "I think it's just generally speaking difficult to get a definitive answer. But you do the best you can, and I think that they did."

Solow did raise a couple concerns with the analysis, including that conflict can be contagious, allowing it to spread. This means that perhaps the individual violent events that the researchers were taking note of in their analysis may have been interrelated.

"Those are technical issues," he says. "But they're not likely to overturn the basic result, which is that the cutoff led to an increase in conflict. I believe their results. They're convincing."

As the authors point out, the increase in violence may well be the legacy of the decision to terminate USAID suddenly. It's a reality that Wright says is concerning since "recent conflict is the single best predictor of future conflict. Once violence escalates, it tends to be self-reinforcing."

That means that even if the aid were to be resurrected, the situation is unlikely to improve as suddenly as it unraveled. That is, says Wright, "the damage from this period of increased violence would not simply undo itself."

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • The damage from the period of increased violence will not simply undo itself, even if aid is resurrected.

    Very likely · Long term

  • Recent conflict will continue to be a strong predictor of future conflict in the affected regions.

    Very likely · Long term

Open Questions

  • What is the long-term impact of the aid withdrawal on conflict in Africa?
  • Are there specific types of aid that are more or less likely to contribute to conflict?
  • How can aid programs be structured to mitigate the risk of increasing conflict?
  • What are the specific mechanisms through which aid withdrawal leads to increased recruitment by armed groups?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by NPR News.

Related Stories

Canada's Spy Agency Conducted State-Authorized Hacks Against Criminals
Developing·3h ago

Canada's Spy Agency Conducted State-Authorized Hacks Against Criminals

Canada's Communications Security Establishment (CSE) conducted state-authorized cyberattacks against drug traffickers, violent extremists, and a ransomware gang last year to disrupt their operations. The agency's annual report detailed three foreign 'active cyber operations' targeting fentanyl chemical sales, extremist recruitment, and ransomware infrastructure, alongside technical disruptions against other ransomware gangs.

TechCrunch
More on this topicforeign aid