Britain set to cut more from overseas aid than the US and any other G7 country

Britain set to cut more from overseas aid than the US and any other G7 country
Keir Starmer confirms cuts to foreign aid to bolster defence spending |

GB NEWS

Oliver Partridge

By Oliver Partridge


Published: 16/02/2026

- 12:09

The UK aid cuts between 2024 and 2026 will be the steepest of any G7 country

Britain is set to cut overseas aid further and faster than those made by the US, as Sir Keir Starmer’s government wrestles with funding pressures.

The UK will cut overseas aid spending by about 27 per cent in 2026-27 compared with 2024-25, while the US reductions are expected to be 23 per cent lower in 2026 than in 2024, with steep cuts proposed by the Donald Trump.


The analysis by the Center for Global Development comes as the scale of UK aid cuts accelerates following a decision last year to reduce overseas development spending to 0.3 per cent of Gross National Income, from 0.5 per cent.

It reveals that the UK aid cuts between 2024 and 2026 will be the steepest of any G7 country, first announced to provide additional funding for military spending from 2027 to help counter the aggression of Russian President Vladimir Putin amid the conflict in Ukraine.

The scale of the cuts may be cause for concern for the Labour government, known historically to back higher aid spending.

Since returning to the White House in 2025, Donald Trump has slashed the main foreign aid body, the US Agency for International Development (USAID), decrying its spending as “wasteful”.

He made a similar move just last week, dismantling the Obama-era environment policy that saw the federal government accountable for emissions.

The Trump administration has said much development aid has been “funnelled to radical, leftist priorities, including climate change, diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), and LGBTQ activities around the world”.

Just last week, Mr Trump signed a spending bill approved by Congress that - while still including significant cuts - was less aggressive than initially proposed by his administration and included $50billion of foreign aid in 2026.

“Congress has managed to significantly reduce the budget cuts proposed by the Trump administration,” said Ian Mitchell, co-director of the Europe programme at the CGD.

“By comparison, we’ve seen very little pushback in the UK parliament at all, though once the cuts start to become a reality we might expect to see more opposition emerge”.

The CGD analysis stripped out certain components of US aid funding such as military support for Egypt, Israel and Taiwan to provide a like-for-like comparison with UK aid spending.

Sir Keir Starmer hopes to plug his defence surge with a cut to foreign aidSir Keir Starmer hopes to plug his defence surge with a cut to foreign aid | PA

It also excludes UK aid spending spent domestically for housing asylum seekers, though including that would “not materially alter the trajectory of the numbers,” the CGD said.

Anneliese Dodds, UK minister for development when the cuts were announced in February 2025, resigned just days later, saying they would “remove food and healthcare from desperate people” and harm the UK’s reputation internationally.

But while there has been sporadic criticism from backbench Labour MPs, the Liberal Democrats and the Greens, the aid cuts have only faced limited opposition while the UK grapples with both tight finances and turmoil within the Labour Party.

Some commentators expect Starmer’s government to drift leftward in the coming months as he tries to reinforce his standing in the party following a number of threats to his leadership and the departure of his chief aide, Morgan McSweeney, and amid the ongoing scandal with Lord Mandelson and his links to prolific paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office has been contacted for comment.

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