UK to cut aid to Malawi by 90% by 2029 as Britain reduces overseas development budget to fund defence
The UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office announced on July 16 that official development assistance to Malawi will fall from GBP50.2 million in 2025-26 to GBP5 million by 2028-29, a 90 percent reduction; nine African countries are set to lose more than 80 percent of direct British bilateral support as the UK cuts its total overseas development spending from 0.5 to 0.3 percent of gross national income
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Summary
The UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) confirmed on July 16 that official development assistance to Malawi will fall from GBP50.2 million in 2025-26 to GBP20 million in 2026-27, GBP10 million in 2027-28 and GBP5 million by 2028-29, a reduction of 90 percent over three years. Nine African countries, including Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Malawi and Zambia, are set to lose more than 80 percent of direct bilateral British support by 2029. Overall UK bilateral aid to Africa will decline by 56 percent as the United Kingdom reduces its total overseas development spending from 0.5 to 0.3 percent of gross national income, citing the need to fund higher defence expenditure. Aid organisations warned that the cuts would undermine healthcare, education, humanitarian relief and climate resilience.
The split
Malawian outlets covered the announcement as an immediate threat to government-funded services, with the Scotland Malawi Partnership warning the reductions could "cost lives." The UK government framed the policy as a strategic shift from "donor funding to investment" and from "grants to technical expertise," promising multilateral channels would partially fill the gap.
By the numbers
- GBP50.2 million, UK development assistance to Malawi in 2025-26
- GBP5 million, projected UK assistance to Malawi by 2028-29
- 90%, reduction in UK bilateral aid to Malawi over three years
- 56%, average decline in overall UK bilateral aid to Africa
- 9, African countries losing more than 80% of direct UK bilateral support by 2029
- 0.3%, UK overseas development spending target as a share of gross national income (down from 0.5%)
Why it matters
Malawi's economy is already under severe strain, with a significant share of its health and education systems dependent on foreign assistance. A 90 percent reduction in UK bilateral aid by 2029 is the steepest single-bilateral cut the country has faced from any major donor in recent decades, and arrives as Malawi has few alternative large bilateral partners positioned to absorb the shortfall.
What to watch
- Whether parliamentary scrutiny in Westminster softens the Malawi-specific figure
- How Malawi negotiates emergency budget support from the IMF, World Bank or African Development Bank
- Whether Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique or Zambia mount coordinated diplomatic pushback