The Carney authorities says it’s reducing overseas assist spending to a degree according to Canada’s pre-pandemic assist allocations — with out specifying the dimensions of this yr’s assist price range.
Tuesday’s price range forecasts $2.7 billion in cuts over 4 years, which can have an effect on issues like international well being tasks. Ottawa can also be withdrawing some assist for a world-renowned assist analysis centre.
“There will probably be reductions in improvement funding to international well being programming, the place Canada’s contribution has grown disproportionately relative to different comparable economies,” the price range doc says.
It’s not clear the place the help cuts will land. The price range talks of “leveraging modern instruments, whereas focusing assist for international locations that want it probably the most” and rejigging current agreements with particular international locations.
The price range additionally says that Canada will lower funding “to some worldwide monetary establishments” whereas discovering ways in which “Canada’s contributions might be leveraged additional.”
Canada spent $6 billion on assist within the final reported fiscal yr ending in March 2024, together with $2.6 billion for worldwide monetary help akin to loans for Ukraine. Whole spending on all aid-related recordsdata — together with assist for refugees in Canada and improvement grants — got here to $12.3 billion within the final reported fiscal yr.

Ottawa elevated its improvement and humanitarian spending in the course of the pandemic, partly to revive stalled progress on combating main sicknesses akin to AIDS and tuberculosis as governments turned their consideration to COVID-19.
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Creating international locations are nonetheless grappling with a debt disaster pushed by excessive rates of interest that spiked as wealthier governments spent huge in the course of the pandemic. They’re additionally going through a rise within the quantity and depth of pure disasters on account of local weather change.
Below the banner of “commerce finance,” the federal government is repurposing $138 million in present funding for International Affairs Canada — primarily from an allocation Ottawa faucets to make funding bulletins at international summits — to rebuild Ukraine’s crucial infrastructure.
The federal government says Ukraine’s reconstruction might increase Canadian trade “throughout practically each sector, from engineering and vitality to agri-food, well being care and know-how.”
The Worldwide Growth Analysis Centre will see steadily deeper cuts, beginning with $11.4 million within the fiscal yr that begins in April, rising rising to $23.5 million yearly on the finish of 5 years.
Parliament has allotted $159.4 million to the IDRC for the present fiscal yr.

The cuts come simply days after Randeep Sarai, the secretary of state for worldwide improvement, steered the establishment would have enough funding.
On the Home of Commons overseas affairs committee on Oct. 28, Liberal MP Rob Oliphant, parliamentary secretary to International Affairs Minister Anita Anand, questioned Sarai about IDRC’s funding on this price range.
Oliphant known as IDRC “a preeminent, world-class establishment, that’s offering analysis in order that we put our assist in the most effective locations doable.”
He mentioned the company’s analysis results in tasks that stop expensive humanitarian crises. Sarai agreed.
“I name it our secret weapon. I believe IDRC is considered one of Canada’s finest investments,” Sarai mentioned. He gave the instance of the company serving to to create “climate-resilient potatoes within the Philippines,” which helped the agricultural poor feed their children and ship them to highschool.
“It would proceed to keep up, I believe, the assist that’s crucial. It’s considered one of Canada’s paramount institutes,” Sarai testified.
Prime Minister Mark Carney heads to the G20 summit in Johannesburg later this month. The South African authorities is anticipated to push for assist spending and loans to handle what it known as this week an “inequality emergency” that’s disrupting democracy and destabilizing economies.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
