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These Are The Top USAID Recipients—From Religious Groups To Major U.S. Companies—As Trump Targets Agency

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Forbes – WHIA

Topline

The Trump administration’s push to eliminate the U.S. Agency for International Development threatens billions of dollars in funding across both the for- and non-profit sectors—prompting chaos among USAID staff in Washington and panic among organizations the agency helps fund.

President Donald Trump speaks to the press after signing an executive order to create a US sovereign wealth fund, in the Oval Office of the White House on February 3, 2025, in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images) AFP via Getty Images

Key Facts

The USAID budget totalled $43.4 billion in fiscal year 2023, according to the Congressional Research Service, and approximately 130 countries received USAID assistance—Europe and Eurasia received 40% of the funding ($17.2 billion), since Ukraine was the top foreign recipient for USAID in fiscal year 2023.

USAID has distributed more than $30 billion in direct financial support to the government of Ukraine between fiscal years 2022 and 2024, according to the CRS.

Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) implement the majority (52%) of USAID programs, while public international organizations administer 34%, the U.S. government is responsible for about 10% and foreign governments implement about 4%, according to a CRS study of USAID non-military funding between fiscal years 2013-2022.

Among public international organizations, which are formed via a partnership between foreign governments, the World Bank Group was the top recipient of non-military USAID assistance, receiving more than $20 billion between fiscal years 2013 and 2022, followed by the World Food Program, which received more than $15 billion.

For-profit firms received 40% of all USAID NGO funding in the nine-year period included in the CRS report, with four receiving at least $1 billion.

Top Ngo Usaid Recipients (fiscal Years 2013-2022)

1. Catholic Relief Services: $4.6 billion (nonprofit)

2. Chemonics International: $4.5 billion (for-profit)

3. FHI 360: $3.8 billion (nonprofit)

4. Development Alternatives, Inc.: $3 billion (for-profit)

5. ABT Associates, Inc.: $2.6 billion (for-profit)

6. RTI International: $2.3 billion (research institute)

7. John Snow International: $1.8 billion (nonprofit)

8. Save the Children Federation, Inc.: $1.5 billion (nonprofit)

9. ARD, Inc.: $1.5 billion (nonprofit)

10. Jhpiego Corporation: $1.3 billion (nonprofit)

11. Deloitte: $1.2 billion (for-profit)

12. World Vision: $1.2 billion (nonprofit)

13. Mercy Corps: $1.1 billion (nonprofit)

14. ADCI/VOCA: $1.1 billion (nonprofit)

15. Population Services International: $1.1 billion (nonprofit)

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