Home Team SNG Draft UN Budget For 2026 Shows Cuts Largely Spare Elite

Draft UN Budget For 2026 Shows Cuts Largely Spare Elite

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres wants to shrink the regular budget by 15% to improve efficiency and cut costs as the UN runs into a cash crisis as it turns 80.
A United Nations flag is displayed as President of the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Annalena Baerbock, speaks during a press conference at U.N. headquarters in New York City, U.S., September 17, 2025. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon/File Photo

A draft UN budget shows that cost-saving measures for next year propose much smaller cuts for senior staff compared with lower ranks, a disparity likely to deepen divisions as financial support declines.

Secretary General Antonio Guterres wants to shrink the regular budget by 15% to improve efficiency and cut costs as the United Nations runs into a cash crisis as it turns 80.

A copy of the revised 2026 budget showed just two of 58 department head posts in the layer of under-secretaries-general beneath Guterres, or 3%, will go.

That compares with around 19% across the board and up to 28% for one lower-ranking category, according to Reuters calculations based on the U.N. document.

Top-Heavy UN

Criticism Of Top-Heavy UN Structure Barely Addressed

Ian Richards, president of the U.N. Geneva Staff Union, said Guterres’ proposals “will make the global body more top-heavy and bureaucratic”.

U.N. humanitarian agencies with their own budgets are set to shed more than a quarter of jobs.

U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said it was “inevitable” that the biggest reductions were where the workforce of more than 14,000 was largest.

“The timing of the UN80 revised estimates precluded more significant organisational restructuring that could reduce senior-level posts,” he said.

But he added that there was potential for further reductions in the future, including at senior levels.

The U.S. and China are the two biggest contributors, together making up 40% of the regular budget, and both are in arrears.

U.S. President Donald Trump, who is sceptical of multilateral institutions, slammed the U.N. this week at its headquarters, though he later told Guterres he backs it “100%”.

The number of senior posts has swollen over the decades – something that a U.N. internal memo this year sought to address through a major overhaul.

Countries Guard Prestigious UN Positions

A non-American under-secretary-general in New York with no dependants earns a tax-free net salary of nearly $270,000, a U.N. website showed. Extra grants and allowances are given for relocation costs, a non-working spouse and children.

U.N. officials say these cabinet-rank posts are the toughest to eliminate, partly because countries view them as sources of prestige and influence. Unwritten rules reserve some for specific states.

Ronny Patz, an expert in U.N. financing, said Guterres appeared to have tried to avoid a backlash by sparing posts at the top. “It’s definitely not a bold proposal. He’s left out some of the hardest choices.”

The proposals are not final and require approval by the General Assembly’s ‘Fifth Committee’ in December after consultations with countries.

Dujarric said reducing senior posts meant structural changes, which would require member states’ approval.

Under the proposed budget, the under-secretary-general roles to be trimmed are one for policy and the special adviser on Cyprus. In the next layer down, six assistant secretary-general posts will be cut, or 11%.

Doubts about the U.N.’s future abound internally; in a survey of employees in August, less than a fifth voiced confidence in Guterres’ leadership.

Less than 10% said they thought U.N. job reforms to date were based on a sound rationale.

(With inputs from Reuters)

+ posts