Eradication of poverty is the most pervasive goal of donors’ foreign aid programs. As a result, there has been much research on the degree of correlation between aid and poverty reduction. However, the work to date has shed little light on the direction of causation between the two variables. Using the method of Granger causality, and conditioning aid and poverty on the state of democracy in developing countries, this study asks whether aid flows impact poverty, whether poverty influences aid flows, or whether causality proceeds in both directions simultaneously. While the results identify no causal relationships in some of the sub-samples, they point to the existence of a multitude of relationships across others.