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US study abroad faces 68% cut under Trump’s proposed budget

The President’s Budget Request (PBR), released by the White House last week, proposes a near 70% cut to State Department study abroad funding and would eliminate or drastically reduce many flagship cultural exchange programs including Fulbright.  

Sector leaders have said the proposals are “not surprising, but disappointing” and are urging Congress to reject Trump’s request, which would “decimate” international exchange programs and “inhibit American excellence at home and on the world stage”. 

They reiterated the PBR is not law or binding, and that the proposals must pass multiple reviews in the House and Senate before the final FY2027 is drawn up.  

While the Alliance for International Exchange prepares to launch an advocacy campaign challenging the cuts, leaders have reason to be quietly confident.  

Last year, sector mobilisation saw Trump’s proposed 93% cuts to federal exchange programs reduced to 5.5%, resulting in $667 million provided to the sector –a modest reduction on previous years.  

Under the President’s latest proposals, the State Department’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) would be granted just $215m for study abroad initiatives next year.

While acutely aware of the cuts’ potential damage, executive director at the Alliance Mark Overmann said there was “no doubt” exchanges had strong backing from Congress “on both sides of the aisle”. “Congressional appropriators clearly have our back,” he added.

We fully expect Congress again to reject this misguided proposed cut, but we’re also not taking that support for granted

Mark Overmann, The Alliance for International Exchange

“We fully expect Congress again to reject this misguided proposed cut, but we’re also not taking that support for granted,” said Overmann, launching an advocacy campaign to show policymakers the breadth of support for international exchange across the US.  

The campaign – set to launch today – lays bare the repercussions of the cuts, which would eliminate the Gilman Program, the Stevens Initiative and American Overseas Research Centres, preventing US students studying, interning, conducting research and participating in leadership opportunities around the world. 

America’s flagship Fulbright Program would see nearly 80% of its budget slashed under the proposals, among many other initiatives – as laid out in the Congressional Budget Justification – which advocates say are integral to US national security.  

Last year, record-breaking sector mobilisation saw some 21,000 letters sent to Congress in defence of such programs, with Overmann and others vowing to do “everything in our power to make sure that happens again this year”.  

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