ABSTRACT External health aid is contracting sharply, and this moment is often framed as a stress test of health system resilience. This perspective argues that it is equally a stress test of global health ethics and governance: When external actors withdraw from essential services, they are not merely responding to fiscal constraints—they are shaping who loses care. In 2025, the World Health Organization (WHO) projected a 30%–40% decline in external health aid to low‐ and middle‐income countries (LMICs) and urged governments to protect essential services, integrate programs into primary healthcare, and improve efficiency. Yet recent developments show that even well‐intentioned national reforms cannot fully absorb abrupt donor exits when core functions have long depended on external finance and coordination. Drawing on up‐to‐date evidence from Nepal and Afghanistan, this article shows how abrupt reductions in WHO and United States (US) support have simultaneously disrupted family planning, nutrition, immunization, community‐based care, and disease surveillance. In Nepal, the halt of US assistance exposed profound single‐donor dependence for contraceptive supply, nutrition programing, and elements of immunization financing—turning commodity gaps into system‐wide operational strain. In Afghanistan, a funding shortfall placed a large share of WHO‐supported facilities at risk of closure as measles and other outbreaks intensified, amplifying existing access barriers—especially for women and girls. These cases reveal a missing governance standard: There is no shared rulebook for how external actors should exit from essential services in fragile settings. This perspective proposes “transition discipline” as a practical global norm that links any reduction in support to (i) a time‐bound grace period, (ii) a publicly specified minimum protected service package, and (iii) a transparent, joint transition plan with clear responsibility. Transition discipline cannot eliminate all risk, but it can make inevitable cuts more predictable, accountable, and less detrimental.
Animesh Ghimire (Sun,) studied this question.