Did USAID Really Save 90 Million Lives? Not Unless It Raised the Dead
A Lancet study’s inflated numbers are being used to push a partisan narrative, not inform public policy.

"Is [the U.S. Agency for International Development] a good use of resources?" James Macinko, a health policy researcher at UCLA, asked in an NPR interview this month. "We found that the average taxpayer has contributed about 18 cents per day to USAID." That "small amount," Macinko estimated, had prevented "up to 90 million deaths around the world."
Macinko was referring to a study he coauthored, which was published in the prestigious medical journal The Lancet. In addition to estimating that USAID programs had saved 90 million lives from 2001 to 2021, Macinko and his colleagues project that if the Trump administration's USAID cuts continue through 2030, an estimated 14 million people could die who otherwise would have lived.
In the same NPR story, Brooke Nichols, an infectious disease mathematical modeler and health economist at Boston University, gushed about the study. "Putting numbers to the lives that could be lost if funding isn't restored does something very important," she said. "I like [the study's] statistical approach; it was really well done and robust."
To the contrary, the study's statistical approach was poorly done and not at all robust. But you need not be an economist or a mathematician to recognize that its results are absurd. The authors failed to apply common sense to the numbers, and so did reporters at NPR, the BBC, the Associated Press, NBC, and other news outlets that amplified the study's findings.
Is it plausible that USAID programs saved more than 90 million lives from 2001 to 2021? Let's compare that to the total decline in worldwide mortality during the same period.
In 2001, the United Nations reports, there were 52.43 million deaths, or 8.4 per 1,000 people. In 2002, the death rate fell slightly; if it hadn't, 370,000 additional people would have died. In 2003, if the 2001 death rate had stayed constant, 750,000 more would have died, and so on. If you add up all the people who would have died over 21 years if the 2001 death rate had remained constant, you get 79 million lives saved.

The Lancet study claims USAID programs saved more than 90 million lives during this period. In other words, USAID was allegedly responsible for the entire global improvement in mortality, plus another 11 million lives.
If you drill down into the numbers, the claim gets even more absurd. Most of the mortality decline (47 million of the 79 million) occurred in China, which received only 73 cents per capita annually from USAID. The least developed countries—the ones with the highest per capita USAID spending—actually saw an increase in mortality of 8 million during the study period, thanks to higher average death rates from 2001 to 2021.
Even if you believe that foreign aid is the primary cause of the declining death rate, these numbers make no sense. USAID comprises about 60 percent of U.S. foreign aid, and the U.S. contributes about a third of all government aid worldwide. Private cross-border charity dwarfs the USAID budget. Was all that money wasted while USAID funds were well-spent? Did advances in medicine, agriculture, public health, and economic growth have no role?
Anyone claiming that USAID was the sole source of declining global mortality during the two decades covered by The Lancet study bears a tremendous burden of proof. Yet the study does not provide convincing evidence of any mortality reduction attributable to USAID.
Studies of this sort often involve problematic data, plagued by missing values, inaccurate numbers, and changes in definitions. Such data require complex processing. To avoid reporting risible results, researchers must do constant reality checks. If simple analysis reveals an effect, more complex methods can refine it, making the result more certain and precise. But when simple methods show no effect, as in this case, it is dangerous to rely entirely on complex methods whose results defy common sense.
The authors of the study began with a common academic approach called "regression analysis." They compared average mortality declines in countries with little or no per capita USAID spending to declines in countries with high per capita USAID spending.
Regression analysis shows only correlation, which does not demonstrate causation. Most researchers are careful to note this distinction. But Macinko et al. claimed their analysis showed USAID caused mortality declines, which is statistically impossible.
That assumption is particularly problematic in this case because a lot of USAID spending went to the same countries that also get aid from other sources. Effectively, the authors gave USAID credit for all the aid that countries received, no matter the source.
In any case, simple regression analysis did not demonstrate any correlation between per capita USAID spending and mortality declines.
For four of the 21 years in their study, Macinko et al. used "dummy variables" to ignore data showing USAID was associated with mortality increases. Their excuses for excluding two of the four years were the 2008 global economic shock and the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. So why exclude the remaining two? "To adjust for major economic and health shocks," the authors say, with no clue about what those shocks were and why they were more important than shocks in other years.
It's not clear why shocks should be ignored in the first place. Does it not matter that USAID recipient countries were hit harder by COVID and the global financial crisis than other countries? Does USAID only save lives in calm times and cost lives in turbulent ones? If so, don't we care about the net lives saved or lost at all times?
Next, the researchers tested 48 "control variables." The purpose of these adjustments is to account for factors unrelated to USAID spending that affect mortality rates. Unfortunately, in this case, there are no good controls. For example, the study included education spending and the availability of piped water; however, since USAID funds education and water infrastructure, these factors are related to the amount of USAID received. All the control variables tested were things affected by USAID spending.
Including controls that are causally linked to your main variable of interest—USAID spending in this case—can cause illusory effects to appear statistically significant. This is particularly problematic when you select a large number of control variables relative to the number of data points and choose those control variables from a long list of candidates.
Macinko et al. did not preregister their controls, meaning they did not publish a research plan that committed them to a particular set. That safeguard aims to prevent researchers from falling prey to the temptation of selecting control variables based on whether the results align with their preconceptions.
What about the estimate that the Trump administration's USAID cuts, if continued, will result in 14 million preventable deaths by 2030? Programs like USAID have numerous consequences, both positive and negative, and it is impossible to accurately calculate or project their impact with any confidence. Pretending to have scientific confidence in a quantitatively dubious measure, such as lives saved, is irresponsible and leads to a loss of trust in science.
The Lancet study seems designed to generate a partisan talking point, suggesting that anyone who supports the Trump administration's actions values 18 cents over 90 million lives. Note the trick of making the cost look small by dividing it among 150 million U.S. taxpayers and 365 days per year while making the benefit look large by totaling it over the entire globe for 21 years.
This study has nothing to do with science. It waves the bloody shirt while feigning scientific detachment.
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Gee. lefty publication lies about use of public money!
Oh, and the sun came up in the east this morning!
And even if they did, so what? Does that justify all the other shady shit they did? And should all Americans be forced to pay to save lives in foreign countries? There are plenty of charities people who care about that can donate their money to. And if we simply must use tax money to save starving African children, how about starting a program that does that without promoting color revolutions and gay race communism in foreign countries?
How many people have died from color revolutions kicked off by USAID?
Former SoS Albright (D) thought the price was worth it.
Now that's a damn good question.
Or died or been raped because of its funding of orgs promoting the migrant trail through Central America?
You pose the bigger question; how is it that the US is responsible for peoples lives in corrupt third world countries in the first place?
[Ditto UN and NATO]
Died with or from USAID cuts?
Not Unless It Raised the Dead
Well Joe Biden proves that is a possibility.
Those zombies are as sharp as a tack.
Even 20 year olds are having trouble keeping up with them.
"The authors failed to apply common sense to the numbers, and so did reporters at NPR, the BBC, the Associated Press, NBC, and other news outlets that amplified the study's findings."
Look; if you take away "Studies Show" there will have nothing to base their lies on.
Weird. Those are the cites that Jeff trusts and many appear as the source of many Reason narratives.
"Did USAID Really Save 90 Million Lives? Not Unless It Raised the Dead. A Lancet study’s inflated numbers are being used to push a partisan narrative, not inform public policy."
More evidence USAID should be terminated due to its incompetence and outright fraud.
Just think of the billions of dollars saved by the US taxpayers if and when this egregious bureaucracy is terminated.
That it saved 90 million lives is highly questionable. That certain people's lives were raised by an increase in their bank accounts is not questionable.
Washington, D.C. is a den of thieves.
""Pretending to have scientific confidence in a quantitatively dubious measure, such as lives saved, is irresponsible and leads to a loss of trust in science.""
They don't care. Party > Science.
This study has nothing to do with science. It waves the bloody shirt while feigning scientific detachment.
This is alwaysthe case since effectively every soft "science" field is controlled by left wing activists.
50% of personal bankruptcies in America are caused by medical bills - bullshit propaganda.
23% of women are raped during a 4 year term on campus - bullshit propaganda.
Women earn 73 cents for every dollar men earn for the same work - bullshit propaganda.
The typical campus rapist is a serial offender who plans his rapes - bullshit propaganda.
There are dozens of others. These fields exist to provide propaganda supporting left wing political goals.
What a shockingly bad article. One person/study gives a methodologically bad estimate of lives saves and you use that strawman to conclude that no lives were saved.
> Programs like USAID have numerous consequences, both positive and negative, and it is impossible to accurately calculate or project their impact with any confidence.
Because it's too hard for you to estimate the impacts of the program, you're just going to give up?
Thankfully, some actually responsible people have done some accurate research into parts of USAID. Looking just at PEPFAR, this report found that it saved between 7.5M and 30M lives, with a best guess of 19M, at a cost per life of $3600. It relies in part on a differences of differences methodology that's immune from the specific criticisms in this article.
https://pepfarreport.org/
By taking a hammer to USAID, Trump no doubt caused millions of deaths, just considering PEPFAR. The way it was done, with an instant cut of programs leading to the US essentially breaking commitments was unconscionable. This is true even if we accept the (probably incorrect) assumption that the rest of the organization was useless.
Anyone is free to open their wallet as wide as they want to send their own money to any organization they choose. We must stop using taxpayer funds for your pet projects.
He wants to Max! out your taxpayer funded globohomo hegemony.
I don't think the article claims USAID had no effect at all. And you also need to consider how many lives USAID activities ended early. One of the big misleading narratives about USAID is that it was primarily an aid organization. Just because it has "AID" in the name doesn't mean that was its primary function. It funded all kinds of other shit too that had nothing to do with saving any lives. As I said in my earlier comment, if you think the US taxpayer is obliged to fund an organization to save lives in other countries, congress is free to fund an agency that does only that. USAID was not the only possible way to do any good things it may have done.
It was used a political tool of the democrats to control international affairs and fund their buddies.
Look at the evidence coming out now that USAID funds were used through NGO's to try and stop Netanyahu from being elected and some of the funds ended up in Hamas hands...
I agree that the article doesn't claim that USAID has no effect at all; mostly because the article doesn't really make any claims about USAID. It simply argues that this one study is flawed. Pretty lazy.
I think it's because the author doesn't want to cede that some USAID programs might actually be very good, just like some people against cuts to USAID might be unwilling to cede that some programs are not effective or useful.
> if you think the US taxpayer is obliged to fund an organization to save lives in other countries, congress is free to fund an agency that does only that.
Yes, Congress should have done that. Congress should do many things. In lieu of that, I think it's clearly wrong to cut the part of USAID that is among the most effective programs run by the federal government. At the very least, there's a million and one things that I would advocate cutting before PEPFAR.
Maxi, how can you attempt to suggest that the PEPFAR report is in any way accurate when they provide a range of approximately 7.5 million to 30 million lives saved.
Can they actually prove that 7.5 million lives were saved? No. And yet they attempt to inflate the approximate 7.5 million allegedly saved lives up to 30 million and then suggest actual amount is 19 million. Come on, this is bunk, and it couldn't be any bunkier.
Wikipedia says that 70-85 million people died in WWII. I suppose because that estimate involves a range, you would argue that we can't really prove that 70 million people died?
You realize the difference between 7.5 and 30 is a lot different than the difference between 70 and 85, right?
Wikipedia says that between 15 and 55 million people died because of the Great Leap Forward. Would you like me to continue?
You’re offering a spurious analogy. Especially since you’re basing it off Wikipedia.rhis guy is a Pedo Jeffy sock, isn’t it?
How much money did you contribute through direct donations to these organizations when USAID funding was cut?
Zero? You could have contributed a few hundred dollars and taken the place of thousands of taxpayers in funding.
But you didn't consider it worth it either.
I've donated thousands of dollars to global health charities over the last year.
Nobody believes this.
Nope. You’re likely on welfare, and are also likely Pedo Jeffy. If true, then you have spent thousands of dollars on 55 gallon drums of Ben & Jerry’s so far this year.
No, not saving someone is not the same as causing their death.
Not legally, not morally.
The nature of reality caused these deaths. The worst you can say is that the destruction of USAID failed to prevent them - not that it caused them.
By my view, Trump (and Musk) took actions which led to the shuttering of PEPFAR, when it otherwise would have continued to help people. I think they are therefore responsible for the results of their actions. Indeed, Musk tried to defend his actions by claiming that no one would die as a result of them, not by claiming that he is morally not responsible for those that do die.
And as I noted, any common-sense moral theory requires that you make good on your commitments. I view the fact that we failed to gracefully shut down USAID programs (allowing those affected time to search for alternate funding) as essentially violating a commitment the USG made.
You’re an idiot.
I didn't break any commitments. I never committed to do any of this nor did I authorize the government to do it.
I'm sure you'd argue the same about the money the governments taking from you in taxes to fund ICE budget increases?
No, because ICE exists for the purpose of protecting the border by removing illegals. Which is a constitutional duty of the executive branch.
Ou should really get an education before you come here to puke out your leftist drivel.
It was a program dominated by bullshit, corrupt, and wasteful spending. This isn’t in dispute.
My guess is that you’re some paid shill here to push the democrat agenda. Which NGO are you working for?
Lol. Activist bullshit.
PEPFAR has saved between 7.5 and 30 million lives, at a cost between $1,500 and $10,000 per life saved. The US government is willing to spend at least a thousand times this much to save an American life.
The number of people who die of HIV/AIDS each year has been declining since 2004–the year PEPFAR began operation. PEPFAR is a major reason for this decline.
Numbers were declining before PEPFAR.
PEPFAR helped decrease the cost of first-line HIV medications from $1000 a month to only $60 a year ($5 a month). Because of the declining cost of medications,
Taking undue credit.
Lol!
Controlling HIV/AIDS abroad keeps Americans safe from HIV/AIDS at home. The federal government spends $29 billion annually on medical care for Americans with HIV and AIDS, not counting insurance company spending: six billion for PEPFAR is a good deal.
So in rebuttal to an article critizing a study with crappy methodology, you cite to a different review that doesn't disclose their methodology at all. But we should trust their conclusions anyway... why, precisely?
Their methodology is at the bottom of the page, starting with the section titled "Methodology".
I stopped paying attention to these kinds of figures when the number of deaths caused by tobacco were being bandied about in the 1980's.
The trick is to take one supposition, and multiply if by a guess, and then present the result as a 'fact.'
And of course, if it happens to fit your political persuasion it becomes a religious tenet.
^This
You do realize that the same type of shoddy statistics are being used to justify Global Warming/ Climate Change?
Machinko appears to have gone to the same school that produced the global warming hoax and ultimate debunked through actual observed history pseudo science predictions of doom and gloom propagated by Al Gore and his ilk.
Congrats, you just reinforced why people have lost trust completely.
Also counter to this fake report the fact of millions of condoms and other contraception was allegedly supplied by USAID, they kept birth rates down, not mortality.
When the government makes a claim about the effectiveness of its efforts , it's lying. Next
If they considered USAID's work to be so important, why did they not choose to fund these organizations through direct donations once USAID was shut down?
Sure, its 18 cents per taxpayer on average - so they could have paid 1,800/year and taken the place of 10,000 taxpayers.
But its never important enough for them to take direct action themselves, only for the government to force everyone to do it.
But its never important enough for them to take direct action themselves, only for the government to force everyone to do it.
Yep. They only want to spend $0.18 and force the rest of us to go along. They can virtue signal and say "look what I voted for!" without actually contributing anything at all.
It's the same bullshit when they rant about taxing the rich. The rich can pay for their virtue projects while they themselves contribute next to nothing.
18 cents is per day, I believe. About $66 per year.
This is a great example of how John Kennedy sees it: Spending Porn
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qOReExv-AY
Now people should be asking: "what happened to the $100 million raised for the victims of the L.A. fire?"
The real purpose of USAID was to expand US influence around the world. The real beneficiary of these cuts is China.
I see you took your retard pills this morning. Looks like you might have overdosed as well.
Your racism against Robby’s new lover is noted.
"Most of the mortality decline (47 million of the 79 million) occurred in China, which received only 73 cents per capita annually from USAID. " - Which begs the obvious question: WHY is any USAID money going to Communist China as aid in the first place?
What the fuck is the US giving China a penny?
"USAID was allegedly responsible for the entire global improvement in mortality, plus another 11 million lives."
OK, lets assume that's true. Now, lets take all the clearly irrelevant spending USAID has engaged in that had no health benefit at all.
While we're at it, lets zero out all the rest of the taxpayer money that has gone to other health initiatives - the WHO, of course. All the rest of the UN propaganda initiatives. Other US health outreach programs.
Add those all up and I bet that we might be saving some money.
I get it. BUT ... wasn't USAID saving lives before 2001? I mean, it's been around since 1961. And how many lives was it saving each year already, before 2001? Assuming some proportion of lives-not-lost each year was due to USAID and carried annually into the 2001-2021 period, doesn't USAID get credit for those lives, too?
USAID was used as a slush fund, to line people's pockets.
Most so called foreign aid is nothing more than bribe money. In fact I would say, all of it. Very little is actually used as stated by our great State Dept.
Then, there's the Clinton Foundation........