When beginning the discussion regarding foreign aid policies in the United States, one must first establish a few basic facts. While most Americans estimate that foreign aid takes roughly 15-20% of our nation’s GNI (gross national income) in reality it actually constitutes far less than 1% of it (approximately 0.17%)1.. While the United States currently contributes the highest amount of money to foreign aid, just over 30 billion, in terms of percent of GNI it ranks nearly 20th. Donald Trump’s recent proposal aims to slash foreign aid by 28% and cut some programs entirely while increasing the budget for the military by 54 billion dollars. Despite those facts and figures, foreign aid is much more than that; it is a narrative of people. Over 1.3 billion people live on less than $1.25 a day, and according to UNICEF 22,000 children die each day due to poverty and more than 750 million people lack access to clean drinking water.2. Poverty, starvation and illness are huge issues for developing nations; however, foreign aid is much more than a charity case and needs to be taken seriously when considering the fate of our own country. By cutting foreign aid, Trump is setting the United States up for economic failure, vulnerability to disease and disaster and increased political conflict.
A leading argument against the distribution of foreign aid is that burden it places on the United State’s already indebted economy; however, this is only looking at one side of the coin. Pumping money into another country’s economy increases their health, efficiency and eventually purchasing power. “95 percent of the United States’ top trade partners were, at one time, U.S. aid recipients… today, 45 percent of all U.S. exports go to developing countries.” 3. In essence, foreign aid is generating a new cluster of United States consumers. By abandoning these countries’ fragile infrastructure before they have solidified, we are fundamentally killing off our customers, neglecting the opportunities to establish strong, advantageous trading partners and losing money instead of saving it.
The health of our planet is only as strong as our weakest link and is therefore a collaborative effort, independent of any single country. One can set up fences, which trap those inside as much as they block those outside, however diseases and disaster knows no such boundaries. While the western world has made great strides in the creation of immunizations and antibiotics to fight diseases, children in the developing world face death from curable illnesses including diarrhea and pneumonia everyday. This lack of immunity harvests the creation and dispersion of variations to these illnesses and leaves even the United States vulnerable. A recent example of the United State’s lack of immunity is the presence of the Zika virus throughout the United States where there are 38,212 confirmed cases according to the CDC. 4. Had this virus been eliminated from its origin in Uganda, individuals around the globe, including in the United States, may not have been affected. By helping others maintain and improve health conditions, the United States is actually investing in the health of our own futures as well as the futures of the developing world.