For decades, the multilateral development system has expanded in scope, financing capacity and institutional complexity, but that trend is reversing. Since its post-war origins in 1945, new organisations and funds have been layered onto the original architecture to address emerging challenges, creating over time a diverse but intricate system. Originally designed to support post-war reconstruction and long-term development, the system has since been used to address an expanding range of global challenges. While this expansion was sustained by strong political support for multilateralism and growing development budgets, these conditions no longer hold. The system is entering a period of retrenchment that is exposing long-standing structural challenges and forcing a reassessment of its architecture, funding and role.
Executive summary
Copy link to Executive summaryA turning point for multilateral development finance
Copy link to A turning point for multilateral development financeThe multilateral development system has reached a turning point. After decades of expansion, growth in multilateral contributions has reversed and long-standing structural challenges are becoming more visible. In 2024, contributions to multilateral development organisations by the members of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) fell by more than 15%. Overall, projections suggest that multilateral contributions could decline by 23-30% by 2027, signalling a sustained reversal rather than a temporary correction.
This reversal exposes some of the system’s long-standing structural vulnerabilities, including its heavy reliance on a small group of major donors. In 2025, 11 DAC members, accounting for roughly two-thirds of total DAC contributions to the multilateral development system, announced aid cuts. These simultaneous cuts by several of the largest contributors underline how the correlated decisions of major donors can compound to form a severe system-wide shock.
In this environment, donor choices involve difficult trade-offs between financing volume and concessionality, with potential system-wide effects. A smaller funding envelope cannot preserve both the system’s overall financing volumes and its highly concessional resources. How cuts are allocated therefore matters as much as their scale: prioritising contributions that can be leveraged may preserve total volume but can shift the balance away from concessional finance. Protecting concessionality safeguards poorer contexts but implies lower aggregate outflows.
Outflows resilience masks growing pressure beneath the surface
Copy link to Outflows resilience masks growing pressure beneath the surfaceThe latest figures available at the time of writing this report (March 2026) show that multilateral outflows have remained strong, but this reflects delayed adjustment rather than underlying stability. Total multilateral outflows reached a record USD 296 billion in 2024, supported by the expanded lending capacity of multilateral development banks (MDBs) and the buffering effects of replenishment cycles and balance sheet financing models. While these mechanisms can preserve the system’s delivery capacity in the short term, they merely delay the full impact of deteriorating inflows.
Signs of strain are already showing in parts of the system. Although lending volumes have continued to expand among some MDBs, several grant-based UN entities have already experienced stagnation or decline in outflows since 2022, with particularly pronounced contractions among large humanitarian agencies. Across the system, organisations report programme delays, reduced geographic coverage and lower delivery targets as they absorb funding shocks through hiring freezes, expenditure deferrals and cost containment measures.
The risks are magnified by the system’s interdependence, raising the prospect of a collapse in multilateral delivery capacity. Multilateral development organisations operate as an interconnected network, relying on each other’s resources, implementing capacity and normative functions. When funding disruptions affect highly central institutions, impacts propagate across the system and can disrupt the multilateral delivery chain. Moreover, the leverage power of some organisations, a major strength of the system in normal times, can also amplify vulnerability: defunding leveraged mechanisms, such as MDB concessional windows, can generate reverse leverage effects, whereby relatively small reductions in donor contributions translate into disproportionately larger declines in financing for developing countries.
Stronger together: An agenda to reset the multilateral development system
Copy link to Stronger together: An agenda to reset the multilateral development systemThe system’s future will depend less on the scale of contraction than on the quality of the collective response of its member states and multilateral organisations. A period of fiscal constraint can either accelerate fragmentation or catalyse a more disciplined, strategically aligned and resilient multilateral architecture. While efficiency reforms can help stabilise institutions financially, multilateral effectiveness depends on restoring trust and aligning incentives for collective action. Today, incentives are moving in the opposite direction: as donors seek greater control and organisations compete for limited resources, behaviours increasingly resemble a prisoner’s dilemma, where individually rational choices generate collectively weaker outcomes. Member states and multilateral development organisations share the responsibility for safeguarding the system’s collective outcomes.
The following recommendations can help to achieve this:
Preserving the system’s delivery capacity will require co-ordinated action by member states to protect its financial foundations and manage funding cuts intentionally. This requires protecting flexible and predictable funding, which is indispensable to the system’s integrity and effectiveness. Voluntary contributions should reinforce, rather than fragment or displace, core mandates. Member states should also rebalance burden-sharing to reduce excessive reliance on a small number of donors and manage funding reductions strategically, with attention to systemic spillovers. Greater transparency and forward visibility on planned funding changes would further help mitigate potentially destabilising effects of funding cuts and support more orderly adjustment across the system.
Enhancing the system’s effectiveness will require multilateral organisations to pursue reforms that sharpen rather than dilute their development additionality and strengthen system-wide coherence. This includes reinforcing mandate discipline, clarifying comparative advantages and rationalising institutional arrangements to reduce fragmentation and restore complementarity and coherence after decades of incremental expansion. Where financing alternatives remain limited, concessional resources should be prioritised for low-income and vulnerable contexts. Organisations should also assess and communicate the operational and distributional implications of funding cuts. Making allocation trade-offs more explicit would strengthen accountability and help preserve development impact under tighter resource constraints.