Devex Dish: Shock and fear for food programs amid US aid freeze

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“Terrifying.” “Extremely concerned.” “Shock and disbelief.”  

These are just some of the words I’ve heard in the past few days to describe the effects of U.S. President Donald Trump’s 90-day freeze on foreign aid, along with the stop-work order halting most of that work. In my 14 years as a journalist, I have rarely heard the level of fear and alarm that is gripping the food systems community right now.

As Dish readers know, the U.S. is the world’s biggest food aid donor. The U.S. Agency for International Development spends almost $5 billion on food aid annually. In addition to emergency aid, USAID’s flagship food security program is Feed the Future, which works to address root causes of hunger by boosting agriculture-led economic growth in 20 countries across Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia.  

This freeze is all part of a Trump administration effort to ensure U.S. foreign aid is aligned with his “America First” agenda. And although the stop-work order exempts “emergency food assistance,” crucial work on food safety, nutrition, building resilience to climate shocks, and research to improve agricultural productivity has all been stopped. Feed the Future, given its longer-term focus, has ground to a halt.

Here’s what you need to know:

Further reading: How Trump’s US aid stop-work order affects global food aid

Did we miss anything? Is your organization affected by the 90-day aid freeze? We’re collecting stories on what it means for the food systems community and would love to hear from you. Drop me a line at tania.karas@devex.com   

Menu du jour

The orders, memos, and clarification from the State Department and USAID leadership are coming down almost as fast as we can report on them. Below is the best of Devex’s reporting:  

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The case for agrifood investment

As the world keeps hiking up its military spending, one economist argues that investing ever-scarcer dollars in agrifood systems instead would bring around much more propitious conditions for peace.

In a Devex opinion piece, Máximo Torero Cullen, the Food and Agriculture Organization’s chief economist, is quick to highlight the economic implications of neglecting this “critical yet underappreciated pillar of global stability.” Agrifood systems provide livelihoods for 3.8 billion people worldwide and on the African continent, almost half of all workers rely on this sector for survival. The result of failing to invest in these systems include lost productivity, environmental degradation, increased health care burdens, and entrenched poverty.

Agrifood systems stand as a transformative lever for prosperity and long-term peace and resilience. The question is, how do we strategically invest in these systems to unlock their full potential, and in turn systemically address hunger and malnutrition?

Read the opinion piece: Investing in food systems is a safer bet than military spending 

Eyes on the prize

Former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack has joined the World Food Prize Foundation as its CEO, a newly created position as the Des Moines, Iowa-based organization expands its events and programming beyond the United States. He takes up the role on March 1, and the foundation’s president, Mashal Husain, will report to him.

For Vilsack, it’s a homecoming: Prior to his two terms leading the United States’ agriculture department, he served two terms as Iowa’s governor. He has also worked with organizations that focus on agricultural trade and sustainable food production.  

The foundation is behind the prestigious World Food Prize, known as the Nobel Prize for food and agriculture, as well as the annual Borlaug Dialogue, a three-day conference dedicated to exploring ideas to end hunger and food insecurity.  

Background reading: World Food Prize president to step down as Mashal Husain takes over

And ICYMI: 150 Nobel and World Food Prize winners call for food security ‘moonshot’

Bringing home the bacon
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Chew on this

What Trump’s pick to lead USDA, Brooke Rollins, thinks about food and nutrition. [Food Fix]

“Just bread and tea”: WFP says aid cuts to Afghanistan leave millions hungry this winter. [Reuters]

Algae could be the key to global food security. It’s also increasingly popular in Chile’s haute cuisine [DW]

With extreme heat making it perilous to work during the day, farm laborers from Brazil to India to the United States are starting to work overnight. But it comes with safety concerns and rights violations. [Grist]

Update, Jan. 31, 2025: This newsletter has been updated to reflect how the 90-day aid freeze may affect the World Food Programme.