Official Development Assistance (ODA) remains a cornerstone of development cooperation for Pacific Small Island Developing States (SIDS). Consistent with the principles reaffirmed under the Sevilla Commitment, particularly the call to prioritise the unique needs of SIDS, ODA in the Pacific is not merely a source of finance. It underpins climate resilience, economic stability, social cohesion and, in many cases, national survival.
Yet this lifeline is under threat. Global ODA levels are contracting just as climate impacts, debt distress and geopolitical competition intensify. For Pacific SIDS, even modest reductions in concessional finance carry disproportionate consequences.
As Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley has observed, “For SIDS, climate finance is development finance.”
Declining global ODA and rising uncertainty
Recent data point to a sharp downturn in global ODA. Official Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development figures indicate a 9 per cent contraction in net ODA in 2024, with a further decline of between 9 and 17 per cent projected for 2025. Average ODA from the 17 largest Development Assistance Committee (DAC) donors, accounting for over 95 per cent of total recorded ODA from all DAC donors, including the United States, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom and France, is estimated to fall by nearly 17.6 per cent in 2025 and a further 11.2 per cent in 2026.
This contraction coincides with global conflicts, donor fiscal pressures and geopoliticised aid, creating acute uncertainty for Pacific SIDS already constrained by limited fiscal space and high exposure to external shocks.
Source: OECD (https://www.oecd.org/en/topics/official-development-assistance-oda.html)
The Pacific’s shrinking share of global ODA
Despite being among the world’s most climate-exposed and economically vulnerable regions, Pacific SIDS have received less than 2 per cent of global ODA for more than two decades. While flows increased temporarily during the COVID-19 period, they have since contracted, creating volatility that complicates national budgeting and long-term investment.
Analysis by the Lowy Institute suggests this uncertainty is likely to persist as donor priorities increasingly reflect strategic competition rather than vulnerability or need. For SIDS, the consequences are immediate: delayed infrastructure projects, weakened service delivery, and widening gaps in climate adaptation and disaster preparedness.
The impacts are evident across the region. Countries such as Vanuatu face recurring reconstruction costs following natural disasters, while highly aid-dependent states like Tuvalu confront existential threats from sea-level rise. Fiji, classified as an upper-middle-income country, faces heavy climate adaptation costs and rising debt service obligations that place sustained pressure on public finances. In these contexts, rapid access to concessional finance is essential not only to rebuild, but to rebuild better.
Graduation, vulnerability and hidden fragilities
Challenges are particularly acute for Pacific SIDS that have recently graduated, or are close to graduating, from concessional assistance eligibility. Graduation thresholds often fail to capture structural vulnerability, small population size and exposure to external shocks.
The Cook Islands illustrates this challenge. While graduation marked an important milestone, it coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic and ongoing climate risks. Reduced access to concessional, low-cost capital has limited engagement with private sector and co-financing partners, increased transaction costs, and slowed implementation, despite persistent vulnerability, as high-risk projects face challenges attracting private investment without such support. Similar dynamics are visible in Solomon Islands.
For Pacific SIDS, the expected impact is stark
Australia has committed to modest increases in its ODA budget, and Japan remains committed to the 0.7 per cent target. However, cuts signaled by other donors risk offsetting these gains. ODA disbursements from specifically DAC countries to the Pacific could fall by up to 9.1 per cent by 2026 compared to 2023, even as development and climate needs escalate.
This contraction jeopardizes progress on climate adaptation, resilient infrastructure and social services. Amid systemic failures in global climate finance where much funding is debt-creating, poorly targeted and insufficient, ODA is a primary channel for climate action in Pacific SIDS.
How ODA can better support pacific development and why it matters
Development support is declining in quantity and quality, with donor-driven approaches, short funding cycles and income-based allocation weakening alignment with national priorities, undermining trust, and reducing aid effectiveness for Pacific SIDS.
To be effective, ODA must align with country-defined priorities and reinforce national ownership, prioritising long-term investment in resilience and economic transformation. Predictable, flexible and multi-year financing is essential, alongside vulnerability-based allocation frameworks, including use of the UN Multidimensional Vulnerability Index, to ensure graduation does not undermine resilience in Pacific SIDS.
Why ODA Still Matters for the Pacific
For the Pacific, ODA remains an indispensable enabler of economic security, resilience and equity. At the 79th UN General Assembly, Tuvalu’s Prime Minister Feleti Penitala Teo warned that without urgent climate finance, technology transfer and renewed multilateral commitment, SIDS face existential threats.
For Pacific SIDS, ODA underpins sustainable development and climate resilience; ensuring it is adequate, predictable and vulnerability-aligned is both a regional necessity and a test of the global development system’s credibility.
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