UNITED NATIONS, December 2, 2025: The United Nations is facing a worsening financial shortfall, with unpaid membership dues approaching $1.6 billion, prompting Secretary-General António Guterres to warn that the organization’s liquidity crisis is at its most serious level in years. Addressing the UN’s Fifth Committee, Guterres said the organization is under “severe financial stress,” with $760 million in unpaid assessments carried over from 2024 and an additional $877 million still pending from 2025. Together, these arrears total roughly $1.586 billion, leaving the UN struggling to meet its approved budget for operations, peacekeeping, and administrative functions.

As of the end of November, only 145 of the UN’s 193 Member States had paid their dues in full. The remaining contributions, many from major donors, have left the world body dependent on temporary cash conservation measures and emergency borrowing between budget accounts to sustain essential services. Guterres said the financial constraints are already affecting the organization’s ability to deliver mandates approved by the General Assembly. Departments across the UN Secretariat have been ordered to delay recruitment, freeze non-essential spending, and reduce travel and conference activities.
The Secretary-General emphasized that the measures are necessary to prevent a disruption in critical peacekeeping, humanitarian, and development programs. In response to the financial strain, the Secretary-General has proposed a 15.1 percent reduction in the UN’s regular budget for 2026, cutting the total to $3.238 billion. The proposed plan includes eliminating 2,681 positions, representing an 18.8 percent reduction in staff, alongside a more than 21 percent decrease in funding for special political missions compared with 2025. The cuts form part of a broader cost-saving and efficiency initiative known as UN80, marking a major restructuring effort as the organization approaches its 80th anniversary.
Guterres outlines $3.2 billion 2026 UN budget proposal
Under the UN80 reform framework, administrative and support functions will be consolidated into global service hubs in New York and Bangkok. Payroll and human resources operations will be centralized across three duty stations, while some roles will be relocated to lower-cost regions to reduce overhead. These measures, Guterres said, are aimed at ensuring the UN remains solvent and operational amid persistent budget shortfalls. While the proposed reductions are sweeping, the Secretary-General confirmed that key development programs, particularly those supporting Africa and the Global South, would be shielded from the most severe cuts.
The sharpest reductions will fall on administrative and back-office departments rather than on field operations or essential program delivery. The UN’s liquidity challenges have become a recurring issue, with unpaid contributions affecting the organization’s financial stability for several consecutive years. The UN’s regular budget, funded by mandatory contributions from Member States, covers the core work of the Secretariat, political affairs, human rights, and economic development programs. Persistent arrears have forced the organization to delay reimbursements to troop-contributing countries and postpone maintenance at several facilities.
Global funding delays hinder UN’s core mission delivery
The 2026 budget proposal is now under review by the Fifth Committee before being submitted to the General Assembly for approval later this month. Guterres said that timely payments by all Member States are essential to restoring the UN’s financial health and sustaining its global mandate. The Secretary-General’s warning underscores the growing tension between rising global demands on the United Nations and the limited financial resources provided by its Member States. The UN’s core operations including peacekeeping missions, humanitarian coordination, and sustainable development initiatives remain heavily dependent on the timely and full payment of assessed contributions.
If adopted, the proposed 2026 budget would mark one of the largest single-year reductions in the UN’s operational spending in over a decade. The reforms, while aimed at preserving the institution’s financial stability, highlight the depth of fiscal pressures confronting the organization as it prepares to enter its eighth decade of multilateral service, underscoring the urgent need for timely member contributions, sustainable financing, and continued confidence in the UN’s global mandate to maintain peace, security, and development. – By Content Syndication Services.
