Skip to main content
3_Vox_FuturePerfect25_LandingPage
3_Vox_FuturePerfect25_LandingPage

The 2025 Future Perfect 25

Meet the heroes keeping global progress alive.

Illustrations by: Mar Hernández, Claire Merchlinsky, Michael Hoeweler, and Nicole Rifkin for Vox
Bryan Walsh
Bryan Walsh is a senior editorial director at Vox overseeing the climate teams and the Unexplainable and The Gray Area podcasts. He is also the editor of Vox’s Future Perfect section and writes the Good News newsletter. He worked at Time magazine for 15 years as a foreign correspondent in Asia, a climate writer, and an international editor, and he wrote a book on existential risk.

When we launched Vox’s Future Perfect section in 2018, it began with a simple question: “What topics would we write about if our only instruction was to write about the most important stuff in the world, particularly the most important stuff that isn’t already widely covered?”

In the years since, the “most important stuff” has grown to encompass everything from the existential risks (and benefits) of AI to the challenges of living a truly ethical life. And for each of the past three years, we’ve honored some of the most important and influential people in these spaces in our annual Future Perfect 50 packages.

But as we began thinking of how to organize the 2025 list, we realized it was time to go back to our fundamentals, because the most urgent story in our wheelhouse is the squeeze on foreign aid and on global health and development, which threatens to reverse some of the most important progress humanity has ever made.

Global aid is trending down just as needs rise. In the US, the evisceration of USAID has only added more strain. These shortfalls translate into rationed food aid, skeletal clinic hours, and broken supply chains.

Routine childhood immunization — still the best deal in public health — has plateaued, leaving more than 14 million “zero-dose” children wholly unprotected. Malaria tells the same story in harsher tones: an estimated 263 million cases and 597,000 deaths in 2023, overwhelmingly in Africa and largely among young children, with conflict, climate shocks, and funding gaps blunting new tools. Even polio — a disease the world was on the brink of banishing — is at risk of backsliding as the eradication program faces a 30 percent budget cut in 2026 and a funding gap through 2029.

Related

In the face of all this, it might be tempting to give up. But while we can’t roll back the clock to the pre-Donald Trump days of more generous foreign aid, we can seize this moment as an opportunity to lean into what works best.

So for the 2025 Future Perfect 25, we’ve selected 25 changemakers who are innovating and implementing ways to keep progress on global health and development along four essential categories, which we’ve used to organize our list.

First, innovators who bend the cost curve. When budgets shrink, engineering has to pick up the slack: Think AI-assisted drug discovery that trims years and dollars; next-generation vaccine tech that stretches cold chains; fortified staples and drought-tolerant crops that sustain calories in a hotter, hungrier world.

Second, movers and shakers who prevent institutions from atrophying under pressure. These are the leaders pushing scarce funds toward the highest-impact interventions, and defending the boring but essential: supply chains that reach the last mile, disease surveillance that catches outbreaks early, maintenance that keeps basic infrastructure from failing at the worst moment.

Third, the soldiers on the ground. Workers embedded in communities close the implementation gap that can foil grand plans: getting mothers to prenatal care, reaching zero-dose kids, restoring basic mental-health services, enforcing environmental rules that keep toxins out of children’s blood.

Finally, the thinkers who figure out how to do the most good with less. They challenge priors with data, make trade-offs explicit, and find the interventions with the largest, clearest returns in healthy life-years and human flourishing. They’re answering the most important question of the moment: How do we improve the most lives for every dollar?

Beyond the list itself, we took the opportunity to deeply report several stories on some of the major challenges — and solutions — around global health, from the dire need for trained midwives in an aid-starved world to India’s precarious role as the world’s pharmacy to a new way to prevent starvation for less. And if this package inspires you to help, please check out our Guide to Giving.

The Future Perfect 25 is not a lament for a more generous era. It’s our 2025 answer to the question we started with: What’s the most important work in the world that isn’t getting enough attention? These 25 men and women are the embodiment of Future Perfect’s original mandate, and the most urgent version of it right now.


A hand wearing a blue glove holds up a petri dish with a bright light and stars shooting out from it
Michael Hoeweler for Vox

The future of global health is at stake. These 7 pioneers could revolutionize it.

Meet the Future Perfect 25: Innovators.

By: Izzie Ramirez, Sigal Samuel, Pratik Pawar, Shayna Korol, and Paige Vega


An illustration of several oversized hands lifting up people of different heights and ages so that their heads are all at the same level
Mar Hernández for Vox

Free cancer treatment for all — and five other ideas to transform global health

Meet the Future Perfect 25: Movers and Shakers.

By: Izzie Ramirez, Sara Herschander, Sigal Samuel, and Shayna Korol


An illustration of a giant hand providing shelter from rain to a young woman and her two children
Claire Merchlinsky for Vox

How 6 organizers are building effective global health solutions from the bottom up

Meet the Future Perfect 25: On the Ground

By: Bryan Walsh, Marina Bolotnikova, Kenny Torrella, Shayna Korol, and Pratik Pawar


An illustration of a young boy looking out toward his friends playing with a ball. In the foreground, just behind the boy, several hands are holding pages with numbers and equations covering them
Nicole Rifkin for Vox

The 6 big thinkers reshaping foreign aid, masculinity, and development

Meet the Future Perfect 25: Thinkers

By: Izzie Ramirez, Sara Herschander, Kenny Torrella, Marina Bolotnikova, and Bryan Walsh


An illustration of a midwife resting a supportive hand on the shoulder of a pregnant woman. Medical supplies fill the scene surrounding
Claire Merchlinsky for Vox

How to deliver a baby with no supplies

These women save countless lives every year. We need more of them.

By: Sara Herschander


An illustration of an ornate flower in the color of India’s flag, with various pills resting on petals throughout
Mar Hernández for Vox

India’s drug industry saved the world once. Can it do it again?

The “pharmacy of the world” needs to reinvent itself.

By: Pratik Pawar


An illustration of hands holding a package that reads “therapeutic food.” There are cropped scenes on either side of a child’s arm being measured and medical notes being taken. Children are running and playing in the distance.
Nicole Rifkin for Vox

You can keep a child from starving for less than $100

Fighting hunger can feel impossible. But thanks to new innovations, it’s actually never been cheaper.

By: Sigal Samuel


Credits

Editorial lead: Bryan Walsh

Project manager: Izzie Ramirez

Editors: Marina Bolotnikova, Izzie Ramirez, Paige Vega, and Bryan Walsh

Copy editing & fact checking: Kim Slotterback, Isabelle Lichtenstein, Esther Gim, and Sarah Schweppe

Writers: Marina Bolotnikova, Sara Herschander, Shayna Korol, Pratik Pawar, Izzie Ramirez, Sigal Samuel, Kenny Torrella, Paige Vega, and Bryan Walsh

Art Director: Paige Vickers

Illustrators: Michael Hoeweler, Nicole Rifkin, Mar Hernández, and Claire Merchlinsky

Audience: Sydney Bergan, Gabby Fernandez, Bill Carey, and Kelsi Trinidad

Special thanks: Bill Carey, Nisha Chittal, Swati Sharma, Elbert Ventura

Future Perfect
The tax code rewards generosity. But probably not yours.The tax code rewards generosity. But probably not yours.
Future Perfect

Why giving to charity is a better deal if you’re rich.

By Sara Herschander
Technology
The case for AI realismThe case for AI realism
Technology

AI isn’t going to be the end of the world — no matter what this documentary sometimes argues.

By Shayna Korol
Climate
The electric grid’s next power source might be sitting in your drivewayThe electric grid’s next power source might be sitting in your driveway
Climate

Batteries that could help drive the switch to renewable energy are already, well, driving.

By Matt Simon
Future Perfect
Am I too poor to have a baby?Am I too poor to have a baby?
Future Perfect

How society convinced us that childbearing is morally wrong without a fat budget.

By Sigal Samuel
Future Perfect
How Austin’s stunning drop in rents explains housing in AmericaHow Austin’s stunning drop in rents explains housing in America
Future Perfect

We finally have some good news about housing affordability.

By Marina Bolotnikova
Future Perfect
Ozempic just got cheap enough to change the worldOzempic just got cheap enough to change the world
Future Perfect

Why the $14 drug could reshape global health.

By Pratik Pawar