In the unfolding story of Kenya’s economic and social
resilience, international aid has often been a lifeline, not just a diplomatic
gesture.
For decades, United States funding — through agencies such as USAID —
has been central to programmes in healthcare, education, agriculture and
governance.
This partnership, deeply woven into the fabric of Kenya’s
development journey, has supported programmes, including HIV/Aids treatment, to
school feeding in arid areas, maternal health outreach and youth empowerment
schemes in informal settlements. It has often been the quiet but critical
foundation upon which countless communities have stood.
However, in recent years, a seismic shift in US policy has
unsettled this foundation. During his first term, President Donald Trump
signalled a sharp departure from the expansive foreign aid policies of previous
administrations.
Guided by his “America First” agenda, the Trump administration
significantly reduced US foreign assistance globally, including to Kenya.
Funding to USAID programmes was pared down, with notable cuts in support for
health systems, agricultural projects and governance initiatives.
This was not
a subtle recalibration; it was a deliberate move to prioritise domestic US
concerns over international commitments. Aid budgets to key Kenyan programmes —
from HIV prevention and treatment under Pepfar to educational scholarships for
marginalised youth — saw marked declines.
The effects of these cuts were immediate and visible at the
grassroots. Clinics that once operated with steady stocks of antiretroviral
drugs began to face shortages, forcing health workers to ration supplies.
Community outreach programmes tackling malaria, tuberculosis and maternal
health scaled back operations. In drought-prone regions, reduced funding for
agricultural resilience projects left farmers more exposed to the vagaries of
climate change.
In urban informal settlements, youth skills training centres
either closed or drastically reduced enrolment, leaving thousands without
opportunities to escape cycles of poverty.
Trump’s second term–now underway—has not reversed that
trajectory. Instead, the policy shift has hardened. The new approach ties
foreign aid more explicitly to political and security alignments, rewarding
nations that advance US strategic interests and penalising those perceived as
drifting away from Washington’s ambit.
While some emergency humanitarian aid
remains, the structural funding that once underpinned long-term development has
been scaled back further.
Reports indicate that a number of USAID-funded
programmes in Kenya have had to close, while others survive on temporary
extensions and uncertain futures. The move has also been accompanied by a push for
recipient countries to increase domestic resource mobilisation, with less
tolerance for dependency.
For Kenya, this shift comes at a moment of acute economic
strain. The cost of living has soared, driven by global commodity price shocks,
a depreciating shilling and persistent unemployment.
The government is under
pressure to service rising debt, much of it external, while maintaining
essential public services. Cabinet Secretaries John Mbadi (Treasury) and Opiyo
Wandayi (Energy) face the unenviable challenge of balancing fiscal discipline
with social protection — a task made more difficult by the shrinking flow of
external grants.
The Court of Appeal’s suspension of the Finance Act 2023 has
further constrained the state’s fiscal room, removing a set of tax measures
intended to raise revenue in the short term.
The grassroots feel this squeeze most acutely. In Turkana and
Wajir, women walk longer distances to reach health facilities that are now
under-resourced, their once-regular visits from community health volunteers
curtailed by lack of operating funds.
In Kisumu and Mombasa, local NGOs that
relied on US grants to run HIV prevention campaigns among at-risk youth now
struggle to keep their doors open, leaving vulnerable groups without vital
services. Farmers in Kitui and Makueni, who had benefitted from USAID-backed
irrigation and market linkage projects, now face uncertainty as those
programmes lose funding, threatening both food security and livelihoods.
Yet, this moment also forces Kenya to confront a deeper
question: how sustainable is a development model heavily reliant on foreign
aid? President William Ruto’s administration has publicly committed to reducing
external borrowing and increasing domestic capacity to fund development.
There
is a renewed push for public-private partnerships, enhanced tax compliance and
regional trade expansion. But transitioning from dependency to self-reliance is
neither quick nor painless. In the absence of adequate cushioning, the
withdrawal of long-standing external support risks leaving millions in
precarious conditions.
Historically, Kenya has navigated earlier periods of donor
fatigue, but the current situation is complicated by a more fragmented global
order. Competition for influence between global powers has made aid a tool of
strategic leverage, often with strings attached. The Trump-era aid
recalibration—and its continuation — signals to countries like Kenya that
they must adapt to a world where external generosity is no longer assured.
The
question is whether Kenya’s leaders can seize this as an opportunity to
strengthen domestic resilience, or whether the grassroots will bear the brunt
of a geopolitical realignment beyond their control.
From Nairobi to Lodwar, from the fishing villages of Lake
Victoria to the pastoralist corridors of northern Kenya, the effects are
already etched into daily life.
The abrupt halting of a school-feeding
programme can mean the difference between a child attending class or staying
home.
The closure of a youth empowerment hub can push vulnerable young people
into risky livelihoods. A reduction in health outreach can reverse decades of
gains against preventable diseases.
In the end, the story of America’s aid cuts is not merely about
budgets and geopolitics. It is about whether the world’s most vulnerable—far
from the negotiating rooms in Washington and Nairobi — can still count on the
promise of shared responsibility.
For Kenya, the challenge is not just to adapt
to this new reality, but to build a future in which the lifeline of development
is anchored first and foremost in the strength of its own people, its own
institutions, and its own vision for prosperity.