Several European governments are scaling back humanitarian and development aid as Europe prioritises funding for Ukraine and higher defence spending, prompting warnings about the impact on vulnerable countries.
Sweden has announced significant reductions in development assistance to several countries in Africa and Latin America, while Germany’s humanitarian budget for 2026 will be less than half of the previous year’s level. Remaining funds are increasingly being redirected toward crises that European policymakers view as having direct strategic relevance, particularly the war in Ukraine.
This shift is part of a wider trend across Europe. The UK has reduced overseas aid to finance military spending, Norway has increased civilian support for Ukraine while cutting funding to Africa, and France plans deep reductions in food aid alongside a sharp rise in defence investment. Analysts say this marks a move away from traditional goals of poverty reduction and hunger relief toward more security-driven and transactional aid policies.
The effects are already being felt in countries such as Mozambique, which is grappling with conflict, climate disasters and displacement. Reduced funding has forced cuts to food distribution, healthcare and education programmes. Aid reductions are also affecting HIV/Aids services in multiple African nations, raising concerns that years of progress in tackling the disease could be undone.
Experts warn that while these decisions may align with short-term priorities in Europe, they risk worsening humanitarian crises and undermining long-term stability in some of the world’s most fragile regions.