A Ugandan farmer who had participated in a USAID activity said: “My plans were ruined when the money stopped coming after nine months, yet I was told I would be getting it for two years. My budget reduced. I cannot pay my children’s tuition on time, I cannot buy them the education materials like books, as I used to, on time.”
Date: 10/25
Region: Africa
Country: Uganda
Topic: Food & Farming, Economy & Livelihoods
Policy Lens: Economic & Trade Interests
Additional Context: This information was collected as part of The Aid Report's original reporting, "US aid cuts uproot Uganda’s emerging 'miracle tree' market," published by Devex. Our contributor looked into the termination of a USAID-backed moringa project in Uganda offered rural farmers modest payments and a rare path toward stability.
Farmers, like Ezua quoted here, participated by receiving cash and operational assistance to plant moringa trees in place of other cash crops including sugarcane, maize, and bananas. Then the program was terminated.
Source: Devex

