09/02/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/02/2025 18:45
NEW YORK, 3 September 2025 - As global education funding faces steep cuts, an estimated 6 million additional children could be out of school by the end of 2026, around one-third of them in humanitarian settings, UNICEF warned in a new analysis released today.
Official Development Assistance (ODA) for education is projected to fall by US$3.2 billion - a 24 per cent drop from 2023 - with just three donor governments accounting for nearly 80 per cent of the cuts. Such a decline would push the number of out-of-school children worldwide from 272 million to 278 million - the equivalent of emptying every primary school in Germany and Italy combined.
"Every dollar cut from education is not just a budgetary decision, it's a child's future hanging in the balance," said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. "Education, especially in emergency settings, often serves as a lifeline, connecting children to essential services like health, protection, and nutrition. It also provides the strongest opportunity for a child to escape poverty and build a better life."
According to the analysis, West and Central Africa faces the sharpest impact, with 1.9 million children at risk of losing out, while the Middle East and North Africa could see an increase of 1.4 million out-of-school children, alongside major rollbacks in all other regions.
The analysis finds that 28 countries are projected to lose at least a quarter of the education assistance they rely on for pre-primary, primary, and secondary schooling. Among them, Côte d'Ivoire and Mali face some of the greatest risks, with enrolment at risk of declining by 4 per cent - equivalent to 340,000 and 180,000 students, respectively.
Primary education is expected to be hit hardest around the world, with funding set to fall by a third - deepening the learning crisis and putting affected children at risk of losing an estimated US$164 billion in lifetime earnings.
In humanitarian settings, where education goes beyond learning, offering life-saving support, stability, and a sense of normalcy for traumatized children, funding could drop sharply - in some cases, cutting the equivalent of at least 10 per cent of the national education budget. For example, in UNICEF's Rohingya refugee response, 350,000 children risk losing access to basic education permanently. Without urgent funding, education centres may close, leaving children vulnerable to exploitation, child labour, and trafficking.
Essential services such as school feeding programmes, sometimes a child's only nutritious meal of the day, could see funding slashed by more than half, while support for girls' education is also set to decline significantly.
Wide cuts at the system level will also undermine governments' ability to make evidence-based plans, adequately support teacher development, and monitor learning outcomes. This means that even children who remain in school could see their learning suffer, with at least 290 million students across all regions projected to face a decline in education quality.
UNICEF urges donor and partner countries to act now to protect education by:
"Investing in children's education is one of the best investments in the future - for everyone," said Russell. "Countries do better when their children are educated and healthy, and it contributes to a more stable and prosperous world."
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Notes to editors:
The projections are based on data from the OECD Creditor Reporting System (CRS, 2023 - the latest available year) and DonorTracker (July 2025). Public donor statements and policy documents were used to identify where education budgets are being reduced, with proportional cuts assumed for others. The estimate of additional children at risk of dropping out focuses on low- and lower-middle-income countries where education aid for primary and secondary schooling is projected to fall by 25 per cent or more. It assumes that cuts of this scale cannot be absorbed quickly by governments. In countries where dropout rates had already stalled, the impact would be felt more in the quality of education than in school attendance in the coming year.