Giving Compass' Take:
- Thalia Beaty reports on a division of USAID relaunching as an independent nonprofit with the support of private donors.
- How can donors and funders step up to fill some of the gaps in humanitarian aid funding and international development efforts?
- Search for a nonprofit focused on international development.
- Access more nonprofit data, advanced filters, and comparison tools when you upgrade to Giving Compass Pro.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
A division of the U.S. Agency for International Development eliminated by Trump administration cuts last year was reborn Thursday as an independent nonprofit, allowing its international work to continue in a new form. This reincarnation of USAID’s Development Innovation Ventures as the nonprofit DIV Fund is thanks to $48 million raised from two private donors. The USAID division's relaunch is a rare instance of continuation after the Trump administration froze all foreign funding last year and unleashed Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to tear down the agency that delivered U.S. foreign aid for 60 years.
Out of that destruction, which cost tens of thousands of jobs and caused people around the world to die, many private efforts were made to preserve decades of data and knowledge housed at USAID, help recipients keep vital programs running and reimagine how international development might work.
But few of those efforts have managed to attract the kind of philanthropic funding that the DIV Fund has. Funders, previous grantees and DIV Fund staff gathered in the glass-walled penthouse of a Washington think tank as the sun set Thursday to mark the new chapter. The mood was resolved and optimistic, having found a way to continue where many efforts in international development have been derailed.
“The loss of US government support is a huge blow,” said Michael Kremer about the USAID division's relaunch, the DIV Fund’s scientific director and a Nobel prize winning economist. “It’s wonderful that private funders have stepped up to help try to fill part of that gap but it’s only filling part of the gap.”
Read the full article about a division of USAID relaunching as a nonprofit by Thalia Beaty at The Associated Press.