The new $2 billion humanitarian model saves taxpayers nearly $1.9 billion through consolidated funding that eliminates bureaucratic waste and duplication, while delivering double the impact per dollar spent. Flexible pooled funding replaces the outdated grant system, ensures powerful accountability mechanisms and forces bloated U.N. agencies to reform or disappear. This approach maintains America's position as the world's most generous humanitarian donor, while requiring other developed nations to finally share the burden.
Slashing humanitarian aid from $17 billion to $2 billion creates catastrophic underfunding that directly causes deaths, hunger and displacement for millions worldwide. The cuts force clinic closures, suspend education for hundreds of thousands of refugee children and trigger surges in preventable diseases like HIV/AIDS and malnutrition. Countries facing famine and war like Sudan, Afghanistan and Yemen lose critical lifelines precisely when global needs have reached record levels.
There's a 50% chance that the Global Fund will receive at least $15.3B in total contributions in its next 3-year cycle (2026-2028), according to the Metaculus prediction community.
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