The Bench Report

The UN at 80: Crisis, Cash, and the Future of Global Cooperation

The Bench Report Season 4

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 13:05

The United Nations celebrates its 80th anniversary, marking eight decades since the UN Charter was signed in 1945. We examine the UN’s founding purposes, including maintaining international peace and promoting human rights. However, this milestone is overshadowed by a severe liquidity crisis resulting from member states, including Permanent Five (P5) members, failing to pay their mandatory contributions. We detail the two main funding types (assessed vs. voluntary) and explore the proposed UN80 reform initiative, which seeks to streamline operations, reduce duplication, and ensure the UN is fit for modern global challenges. 

Key Takeaways

  • The UN Charter was signed on 26 June 1945, establishing the organization with the goals of saving succeeding generations from war and promoting social progress.
  • The UN System is broader than the main organization, encompassing specialized agencies like the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
  • The UN faces a worsening cash crisis because many member states are not paying their legally-binding assessed contributions in full or on time.
  • As of October 2025, the top three states owing significant arrears to the UN’s regular budget are the US, China, and Russia—all permanent members of the Security Council.
  • The Security Council is the main decision-making body for international peace and security, composed of five permanent members (P5: China, France, Russia, UK, US) and ten elected non-permanent members.
  • The UK supports reforming the Security Council to include permanent membership for countries such in Africa, as well as Germany, Japan, India, and Brazil.
  • The UN80 Initiative aims to find efficiencies, review mandates, and potentially merge or streamline agencies (like UNFPA and UN Women) to better align the UN’s actions with its goals.

Source: The United Nations at 80: Paper Series
Research Briefing
Published Wednesday, 29 October, 2025


Follow and subscribe to 'The Bench Report' on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube for new episodes daily: thebenchreport.co.uk

Subscribe to our Substack 

Shape our next episode! Get in touch with an issue important to you - Producer Tom will grab another coffee and start the research!

Email us: thebenchreportuk@gmail.com

Follow us on YouTubeX, Bluesky, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok! @benchreportUK

Support us for bonus and extended episodes + more.

No outside chatter: source material only taken from Hansard and the Parliament UK website.  

Contains Parliamentary information repurposed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0....

Ivan

Hello and welcome again to the Bench Report, where we discuss recent debates and briefings from the benches of the UK Parliament. A new topic every episode. You're listening to Amy and Ivan. Today we have a special extended episode on the United Nations turning 80 years old.

Amy

And we're looking at some recent House of Commons library briefings, really digging into, you know, the UN's history, its current struggles, and these urgent plans for the future. Especially when you consider its origins. The ambition back then was just immense.

Ivan

Right. The charter itself signed June 26, 1945, San Francisco. Then it came into force what, October 24th, that same year.

Amy

Exactly. Fifty initial signatories. Poland joined soon after making it 51 founding members. It was this collective promise, really, born out of the uh the trauma of World War II.

Ivan

And the preamble lays it out, doesn't it? To save succeeding generations from war.

Amy

Reaffirm faith in human rights, promote social progress. It was, you know, more than just politics. It felt like a moral necessity.

Ivan

And the groundwork for it was actually laid during the war itself, step by step. Quite remarkable foresight, really.

Amy

It was. You had the Atlantic Charter back in August 41, Churchill and Roosevelt talking about a wider and permanent system of general security.

Ivan

Roosevelt even came up with the name United Nations, didn't he? In early 42.

Amy

He did, yeah. January 42, when 26 states united against the Axis powers. That was the formal start of the name.

Ivan

Then the actual nuts and bolts started coming together. Dumbarton Oaks in 44 drafted the initial charter outline.

Amy

But the um the really decisive moment, the one that shaped its power structure was Yalta in early 45.

Ivan

That's where the veto power for the permanent Security Council members came from.

Amy

Precisely. The P5, China, France, Russia, UK, U.S., the victorious allies essentially got a veto over substantive decisions. And that basic power structure, well, it's still the core issue today, 80 years on.

Ivan

It's quite the irony, isn't it?

Amy

Yeah.

Ivan

The mechanism designed for security by the victors now often seems to be the source of paralysis.

Amy

It certainly can be.

Ivan

And a little bit of UK history there. The first UN sessions, General Assembly and Security Council, were actually held in London, January 46th.

Amy

That's right. Methodist Central Hall and Church House, facilitated by the British diplomat Gladwin Jeb, a key early role.

Ivan

So from that initial blueprint to now, the UN has grown immensely. It's not just one organization.

Amy

No, it's a whole UN system. You've got specialized agencies, some very powerful ones like the World Health Organization, the IMF. They're all part of this wider family.

Ivan

But the charter did set up six main organs. We know the General Assembly in New York, the big forum for all hundred and ninety-three members.

Amy

And the Security Council also in New York, with that primary responsibility for peace and security, though, as we said, often gridlocked.

Ivan

Then there's the Economic and Social Council, ECOSOC, coordinating policy on, well, almost everything else, economic, social, and environmental issues.

Amy

Based in New York and Geneva, and the Secretariat, the UN's International Civil Service, headed by the Secretary General.

Ivan

And the judicial arm?

Amy

That's the International Court of Justice, the ICJ. Importantly, it's not in New York. It's at the Peace Palace in The Hague. It handles legal disputes between states.

Ivan

And the sixth one, the trusteeship council. That's suspended now, right?

Amy

T Yes. Since 1994, its job was overseeing the transition of former colonies, the trust territories, to self-governance. Once the last one achieved that, its work was done.

Ivan

So back to the Security Council. The P5, China, France, Russia, UK, US, still reflecting the world of 1945.

Amy

Aaron

Ivan

which is precisely the problem. That power balance doesn't really map onto today's world, does it? Hence the constant calls for reform. You'd think after 80 years. But it's complicated. What's the UK's official line on reform, according to these briefings?

Amy

The UK position is actually quite specific. It supports expansion, uh permanent membership for Africa, which is a major gap.

Ivan

Okay, that makes sense.

Amy

And also permanent seats for Germany, Japan, India, and Brazil. So a significant restructuring to make it more representative.

Ivan

Suggests the UK sees that legitimacy is tied to representation, I suppose.

Amy

It seems so. If the Council isn't seen as reflecting the world, its authority weakens.

Ivan

Now, structure and politics aside, there's a huge elephant in the room. Money. Or the lack of it.

Amy

Absolutely. We have to talk about the financial crisis because the Secretary General Antonio Guterres has issued stark warnings. He's talking about a race to bankruptcy.

Ivan

Bankruptcy. That's existential for the U.N.

Amy

It really is. So how is it funded? Basically, two mainstreams. First, assess contributions. These are mandatory.

Ivan

Right. Every member state has to pay based on its capacity to pay its economy size.

Amy

Exactly. And this money funds the regular budget, about $3.7 billion for 2025. And also peacekeeping, which is even larger, around $5.4 billion.

Ivan

And the UK's share?

Amy

The UK pays about 3.991% of the regular budget. So just under 4%. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

Ivan

Okay. That's the mandatory part. What's the other stream?

Amy

Voluntary contributions. These are optional donations. They mostly go to specific UN agencies, think UNICEF, the World Food Program, and often they're earmarked, meaning the donor says exactly what project the money should be used for.

Ivan

So the current crisis, it's hitting the mandatory funding.

Amy

Entirely. The core problem is member states simply not paying their assessed contributions, not paying in full, or not paying on time. And some very big members are culprits.

Ivan

How bad is the shortfall? The figures must be pretty large.

Amy

They are staggering. As of October 2025, the UN was owed $1.8 billion just for the regular budget.

Ivan

$1.8 billion.

Amy

And another $3.7 billion for peacekeeping operations.

Ivan

Wow. So combined it's $5.5 billion outstanding?

Amy

Correct. A massive hole in the finances needed for basic operations and keeping peacekeepers in the field.

Ivan

And who are the main debtors? You said some big players.

Amy

This is where it gets uh politically very sensitive. The top three debtors are all P5 members, the very countries with the veto power.

Ivan

You're kidding. Who?

Amy

The United States owes the most by a huge margin. Nearly $1.5 billion. Uh $1.495 billion to be precise.

Ivan

Almost $1.5 billion. Just from the U.S.

Amy

Then China owes $192 million and Russia owes $72 million.

Ivan

So the countries that effectively run the Security Council are also the ones withholding the funds needed to run the organization.

Amy

It sends a very clear message, doesn't it? Deep dissatisfaction, maybe using funding as leverage. The U.S., for instance, has talked about wanting a strong return on our investment.

Ivan

Treating it like a business investment rather than a commitment to a global body.

Amy

That's certainly one interpretation. It suggests a very transactional view.

Ivan

Is there any penalty for not paying?

Amy

Well, Article 19 of the Charter says states that are two years or more in arrears can lose their vote in the General Assembly. It's not automatic, but it's a potential sanction.

Ivan

But the immediate impact is practical, right? Operational cuts.

Amy

Exactly. The Secretary General has already proposed a significantly reduced budget for 2026 down to $3.2 billion, and crucially an 18.8% cut in staffing across the board.

Ivan

Nearly a fifth of the staff. That's huge. That must impact everything.

Amy

Everything from policy work on climate change or poverty right through to critically peacekeeping resources. Peacekeeping is often the first thing hit when cash runs low, which directly affects the UN's credibility on the ground.

Ivan

So this financial treasure cooker exists alongside deep political divisions.

Amy

Profound divisions. You saw it clearly in the Security Council debate on the 80th anniversary itself, October 24th, 2025. The briefings described clear divides.

Ivan

Russia was chairing that month, weren't they? Aaron Ross Powell, Jr.

Amy

They were. And their statement, well, it reaffirmed commitment to the charter, but then immediately accused the West of dividing the world. A classic deflection tactic, some would say.

Ivan

And how did the UK respond?

Amy

According to the briefings, very directly. Accusing Russia of hypocrisy, specifically referencing the invasion of Ukraine as flagrantly contravening the prohibition on the use of force in the Charter, basically saying Russia's actions undermine the Council's entire purpose.

Ivan

Aaron Powell So you've got veto-wielding members openly clashing over the fundamental rules while also withholding funds.

Amy

And the largest funder, the U.S., talking about return on investment and inefficiencies. It all paints a picture of an organization under immense strain from multiple angles.

Ivan

Aaron Powell Which leads us neatly to the UN AD initiative. This is the internal plan to fix things.

Amy

It is. It's the Secretary General's big push to make the UN well fit for purpose in the 21st century, to tackle inefficiency and try to restore some sense of common purpose.

Ivan

Aaron Powell And a key target is this idea of fragmentation, silos, duplication.

Amy

Yes, and the scale of it is, frankly, mind-boggling when you see the numbers.

Ivan

Well, give us some examples.

Amy

Okay, get this. The UN system has apparently adopted over 40,000 different mandates over the years.

Ivan

40,000.

Amy

Delivered by over 140 different UN entities. And in the average country where the UN operates, there are around 20 distinct UN agencies on the ground.

Ivan

20 different UN offices potentially doing similar things in the same place.

Amy

You can see the potential for overlap, for inefficiency, for um coordination challenges, and the support structure needed is vast. The Secretariat Services, 27,000 meetings a year.

Ivan

27,000.

Amy

Processes, 2,300 pages of documents daily. Just the cost of processing all that paper is estimated at $360 million a year.

Ivan

Just shuffling paper, essentially. So UN80 aims to cut through that.

Amy

Radically. The initial proposals involved some pretty dramatic restructuring, actual mergers and closures of agencies.

Ivan

Like what? Which agencies are potentially on the chopping flock?

Amy

Well, one proposal mentioned is closing UNAIDS completely by the end of 2026.

Ivan

UNAIDS, the main body coordinating the global response to HIVAIDS, closing it entirely.

Amy

That's one of the initial quite drastic proposals highlighted. It shows how severe the thinking is around streamlining.

Ivan

What about mergers?

Amy

Significant ones proposed. Merging the UN Population Fund, UNFPA focused on sexual and reproductive health with UN women, the agency for gender equality.

Ivan

Combining reproductive health and women's empowerment. That sounds complex.

Amy

Aar

Ivan

Potentially controversial, yes. And another big one: merging the UN Development Program, UNDP, which is huge, with the UN Office for Project Services, UNO PS, which handles logistics and project management. So we're really trying to consolidate major functions. These aren't minor tweaks.

Amy

No, these are fundamental changes to how the UN delivers on development, health, human rights. It's driven by this need to reduce fragmentation and let's be frank, save money. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

Ivan

And the UK's view on these internal reforms.

Amy

The UK government supports the UN 80 reform push. They want a more efficient UN, but there's a condition attached.

Ivan

Uh, there's always a but.

Amy

The message is clear. Underperforming multilateral organizations will face funding cuts in the future. So support for reform is tied directly to perceived performance and implicitly to member states actually paying their dues.

Ivan

So it's a double bind. The UN needs reform because it's inefficient, partly due to fragmentation, but it also needs the money, which is being withheld partly because of perceived inefficiency in political dispute.

Amy

Exactly. It's celebrating 80 years, a huge milestone, but facing this perfect storm, deep political divisions, especially among the P5, a severe funding crisis driven by those same key members, and now this urgent, potentially painful internal reform process.

Ivan

It really forces a fundamental question about its future, doesn't it? Can these sweaking changes imposed under such duress actually work? Can they restore faith, unlock the funding, and make the UN effective for the challenges ahead? That's something for you, the listener, to really mull over.

Amy

Indeed. Will forced internal reform be enough to overcome the external political and financial pressures?

Ivan

As always, find us on social media at bench report UK. Get in touch with any topic important to you.

Amy

Remember, politics is everyone's business.

Ivan

Take care.

Podcasts we love

Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.