Secretary Rubio should take a page from Senator Rubio’s book on foreign aid
Watching Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) when I worked on the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, I saw a man vocally make the case for U.S. foreign assistance, linking its importance to national security and American ideals at John Kerry’s confirmation hearing for secretary of State in 2013. American aid was not just a world of change but a chance to change the world.
Seeing him now as secretary of State, it’s hard to imagine he is the same person, as the Trump administration’s attempts to shut down USAID and impose a blanket freeze on foreign aid with few exceptions.
What started as a pause and review of foreign aid has turned into a full-blown crisis that threatens to unravel the entire international development sector and affect millions of lives around the world. And having just appointed himself acting director of USAID, it is Secretary Rubio who bears the responsibility for what comes next, not unelected political appointees with an axe to grind.
Secretary Rubio therefore may want to take a page out of Senator Rubio’s book. Back on the Senate floor in 2017, Senator Rubio recognized the historical importance of how U.S. foreign assistance helped rebuild Western Europe and Japan following World War II:
“Did it help the people of Japan and people of Germany? Absolutely. Did it help the people of the United States? Without question,” he said, citing how America is better off with strong allies, stable democracies and trade partners thanks to U.S. foreign aid.
The senator pointed out that U.S. foreign aid helps strengthen the American economy and national security noting that “95 percent of the people on this planet who buy things live outside the United States … seven of the 10 fastest growing economies happen to be in the developing world.”
For American businesses engaged globally, he cautioned that “People can’t be consumers if they’re starving, if they’re dying of HIV/AIDS. They can’t be consumers if they’re dying of malaria, they can’t be consumers if they live in an unstable country.”
Secretary Rubio may have changed his tune but it’s still the case the United States helps people, communities and markets survive and thrive around the world, which in turn protects American interests. According to Senator Rubio, “We are helping people to emerge from poverty and ultimately become members of a global consumer class who buys American goods and services.”
The Trump administration’s claims that USAID today acts against American interests or is corrupt or ineffective — claims made without any empirical evidence — risks undermining the entirety of foreign aid, which is just a rounding error of the U.S. national budget.
Despite what most Americans think, in 2023, U.S. foreign aid represented 0.24 percent of its gross national income (GNI), placing the United States 26th on the list of donor countries, according to the size of its economy. This tiny amount — a fraction of a percent — punches far above its weight, with every dollar stretching to help the world’s poor and cementing America’s global humanitarian leadership.
It's such a small amount that the average American spends roughly the same amount on Halloween decorations as their taxes do on foreign aid each year — about $100, according to aid group Oxfam where I worked.
Those “Halloween dollars” spent on U.S. foreign aid achieve a lot more than my kids’ costumes. US foreign aid has resulted in a 48 percent decline in malaria death rates since 2006, saving 11.7 million lives, providing 28 million children under five with nutrition helping more than 92 million women and children access essential and often life-saving care and saving more than 25 million lives from HIV/AIDS.
Despite its incredible achievements, foreign aid — like any investment — can always be spent better. There’s been bipartisan calls to shift power and resources away from the D.C. Beltway to communities on the front line who can invest dollars more smartly. The first Trump administration led the way on this “localization” agenda and the Biden administration followed suit.
There is more we can do to ensure we are providing people with a hand-up and not a handout. And we are ready for a serious discussion if the Trump administration wants to be serious about foreign aid.
But tearing apart the world’s largest aid agency overnight, pulling food, medicine and life-saving aid from the most vulnerable and laying off thousands of aid workers including Americans and those globally whose jobs support their entire communities is economically and historically short-sighted.
The senator I worked with years ago reminded Americans that “we are not a small, obscure nation ... if there is a major crisis anywhere on this planet, it will eventually have a nexus to life in America.”
As Secretary Rubio presides over a foreign aid crisis of the Trump administration’s own making, he may want to remember his own words of wisdom from the Senate floor.
Fatema Z. Sumar is an adjunct lecturer at Harvard Kennedy School and executive director of the Harvard Center for International Development who served in senior roles across four Democratic and Republican administrations on foreign policy and international development.
Topics
-
Trump says Treasury Secretary Bessent is going to Ukraine as U.S. has 'little to show' for aid sent
Trump's post on Truth Social suggested the two leaders could discuss pathways to ending the conflict.CNBC - 1h -
The case for persisting with foreign aid
Until now, the US has been a strikingly benign and successful hegemonFinancial Times - 3h -
Rubio: US walking away from 'foreign aid that is dumb'
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Monday the United States is walking away from “dumb” foreign aid, not from foreign aid entirely. “We’re not walking away from foreign aid,” Rubio said in an ...The Hill - 20h -
Republican senator, Brennan tangle over US foreign funding
Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.) and CBS “Face the Nation” host Margaret Brennan tangled over the United States’s foreign funding on Sunday, as the Trump administration slashes the country’s spending on ...The Hill - 2d -
Trump should not take bond investors for granted
It needs only a small reduction in the dollar slice of global reserves to hit prices and raise borrowing costsFinancial Times - 3d -
Guatemala gives Rubio a second deportation deal for migrants being sent home from the US
Guatemalan President Bernardo Arévalo says his country will accept migrants from other countries who are being deported from the United StatesABC News - 5d -
Trump’s Foreign Aid Freeze Leaves Millions Without HIV Treatment
President Trump’s pause on aid, and the gutting of the primary aid agency, could jeopardize the health of more than 20 million people worldwide, including 500,000 children, experts say.The New York Times - 6d -
Guatemala strikes deal with Rubio to accept migrants from other countries deported from the US
Guatemala’s president says his country will accept migrants from other countries being deported from the United StatesABC News - 6d
More from The Hill
-
Democrats press McMahon on 'minimal' education policy experience ahead of hearing
A pair of Democratic senators is pressing President Trump's Education secretary pick Linda McMahon over her "minimal" experience in education policy and broader views on education ahead of her ...The Hill - 49m -
Costco latest retailer to limit egg purchases: What are other stores doing?
Trying to stock up on eggs? You may have a hard time — if the shelves near you aren't already empty.The Hill - 55m -
Amid Democrats' soul-searching, we need to rethink the Obama presidency
The Obama presidency, while highly regarded and beloved among Democrats, must be reexamined in order for the Democratic Party to win, as Obama's presidency was marred by inaction in the face of the ...The Hill - 1h -
Watch: Trump, King Abdullah II give remarks at White House meeting
President Trump welcomed King Abdullah II of Jordan to the White House on Tuesday morning, as Trump doubled down on his push for the U.S. to take responsibility for the war-torn Gaza Strip. During ...The Hill - 1h -
Live updates: Trump doubles down on controversial Gaza plan alongside Jordanian king
President Trump met with King Abdullah II of Jordan on Tuesday where he doubled down on a controversial proposal for the U.S. to take over the Gaza Strip amid pressure he's putting on neighboring ...The Hill - 1h
More in Politics
-
Marc Fogel, American teacher held in Russia for 3.5 years, is released
Marc Fogel, an American school teacher, held by Russia for 3 1/2 years, will be released and allowed to come home, the White House said on Tuesday.NBC News - 19m -
Democrats press McMahon on 'minimal' education policy experience ahead of hearing
A pair of Democratic senators is pressing President Trump's Education secretary pick Linda McMahon over her "minimal" experience in education policy and broader views on education ahead of her ...The Hill - 49m -
Costco latest retailer to limit egg purchases: What are other stores doing?
Trying to stock up on eggs? You may have a hard time — if the shelves near you aren't already empty.The Hill - 55m -
Amid Democrats' soul-searching, we need to rethink the Obama presidency
The Obama presidency, while highly regarded and beloved among Democrats, must be reexamined in order for the Democratic Party to win, as Obama's presidency was marred by inaction in the face of the ...The Hill - 1h -
Watch: Trump, King Abdullah II give remarks at White House meeting
President Trump welcomed King Abdullah II of Jordan to the White House on Tuesday morning, as Trump doubled down on his push for the U.S. to take responsibility for the war-torn Gaza Strip. During ...The Hill - 1h