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Elon Musk links USAID funding cuts to lower death rates in Africa

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Tech billionaire Elon Musk has ignited global debate after claiming that deaths across Africa declined following significant cuts to United States foreign aid, a position that sharply contradicts warnings from leading humanitarian and global health organizations.

Musk made the remarks in a post on X on Tuesday while defending funding reductions implemented under the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), an initiative that has substantially reduced spending by the United States Agency for International Development in recent years.

According to Musk, reducing USAID funding did not increase mortality across Africa. Instead, he argued that the cuts ended programmes that allegedly contributed to political instability in some African countries.

“Deaths in Africa DECREASED after USAID funding was cut, because they’re no longer able to push for violent revolution to install leftist regimes!” Musk wrote on X.

To support his claim, Musk shared mortality data, including weekly death statistics from South Africa covering the period between January 2023 and May 2026. The graph also included the period following funding reductions to both USAID and the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.

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According to the analysis he referenced, observed excess deaths remained close to zero and appeared lower than projections made before the funding cuts. The report also cited a 2019 research paper which argued there was limited statistical evidence linking increased foreign aid spending to significant improvements in life expectancy or mortality rates in developing countries.

The comments have intensified ongoing debate over the effectiveness of international aid programmes, particularly as governments, development experts and humanitarian agencies continue to assess the impact of reduced U.S. foreign assistance.

Available data indicates that U.S. humanitarian assistance has fallen sharply in recent years. According to Refugees International, humanitarian funding dropped from $14 billion in 2024 to $3.7 billion in 2025, with the organization describing the dismantling of USAID as “the most prominent manifestation” of a broader decline in international humanitarian support.

The Center for Global Development also reported that USAID spending declined by approximately 58 percent in 2025 compared with the previous year.

Musk has consistently defended the reductions, arguing that American taxpayers’ money should not be wasted or used to advance political agendas. He further alleged that some previous USAID programmes in Africa contributed to “violent revolution” aimed at installing left-leaning governments, insisting that ending such initiatives removed a source of instability.

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