For decades, the United States has been one of the world’s largest supporters of nonprofit organizations, humanitarian agencies, and international development programs. Through agencies like the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), billions of dollars have been invested in global health, education, disaster relief, democracy, and economic development.
In recent years, U.S. policy has shifted significantly. Under the Trump administration, several decisions reduced or suspended funding for international aid programs and multilateral organizations. These changes sparked debate about whether the U.S. was effectively trying to defund NGOs.
The Short Answer
Funding for many NGO programs was reduced, paused, or redirected, but the government did not seek to eliminate NGOs as organizations. Instead, it pursued policies that reduced, paused, or redirected government funding that many NGOs rely on to carry out their work. Since thousands of nonprofit organizations receive grants from U.S. government agencies, these funding decisions have a major impact across the nonprofit sector.
What Changed?
1. Freeze on USAID Activities
One of the most significant actions was a broad pause on many USAID-funded activities while programs underwent review.
USAID has historically been one of the world’s largest providers of foreign assistance, funding projects in areas such as:
- Humanitarian organizations
- Health programs
- Refugee assistance
- HIV/AIDS initiatives
- food security projects
- Democracy and governance
When funding was paused or reduced, many NGOs that depended on these grants experienced immediate financial pressure. Some organizations delayed projects, reduced staff, or suspended operations while awaiting funding decisions.
2. Reduced Support for International Organizations
The administration also sought to reduce U.S. participation in several international institutions and programs.
These included efforts to withdraw funding from or reduce engagement with certain United Nations agencies and other multilateral organizations.
Because many NGOs work alongside these institutions, reduced U.S. funding affected numerous international development and humanitarian initiatives.
3. Greater Review of Federal Grants
The administration also proposed changes to how federal research and grant funding would be managed.
The proposal suggested giving political appointees greater authority to review, modify, or cancel certain grants if they were considered inconsistent with government priorities.
Supporters argued this would ensure taxpayer money aligned with national interests.
Critics, however, warned that reducing the role of independent peer review could make grant funding more political and create uncertainty for research institutions and nonprofit organizations.
Why Were These Changes Introduced?
The administration argued that foreign aid and federal funding should better reflect U.S. national interests.
Officials said the goals included:
- Reducing government spending
- Increasing oversight of grant programs
- Aligning foreign assistance with U.S. foreign policy priorities
- Reviewing programs for effectiveness
- Limiting funding for activities viewed as inconsistent with administration policies
Supporters viewed these measures as reforms to improve accountability and efficiency.
Opponents argued that the cuts weakened humanitarian programs, disrupted long-term development projects, and reduced America’s leadership in global development.
How Did NGOs Respond?
Many nonprofit organizations had to quickly adapt.
Common responses included:
- Delaying or scaling back projects
- Reducing staff
- Seeking alternative funding sources
- Increasing private fundraising
- Expanding partnerships with foundations and other donors
- Diversifying funding to reduce reliance on government grants
For organizations heavily dependent on U.S. government funding, the changes highlighted the importance of financial resilience and diversified income streams.
What Does This Mean for NGOs?
These events have provided a great lesson for nonprofit organizations worldwide: governmental funding priorities change along with political changes. Organizations who depends on only one source of funding have huge operational risks when policy changes unpredictably. Most non-governmental organizations (NGOs) now focus on diversification of the donor portfolio, applying to multiple funders, working with private foundations, capacity building of fundraising, and building up readiness in grants and financial planning, so that they can make NGOs’ lives more stable.
Final Thoughts
Did the U.S. try to defund NGOs?
In recent years, many people have asked whether the United States was trying to “defund NGOs.” The question gained attention after major changes to U.S. foreign aid and international funding policies. While the answer isn’t entirely straightforward, the policy changes had a significant impact on many nonprofit organizations worldwide.
The funding changes affected humanitarian aid, international development, research, and global partnerships, prompting many organizations to rethink how they secure funding and plan for long-term sustainability.
For NGOs, the experience serves as a reminder that building diverse funding sources and strong grant strategies is essential to maintaining resilience in an evolving policy landscape.

