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The United States has proposed a new method of apportioning
U.N. dues that would mean sharp increases for countries including China, Russia
and India.
Other rapidly developing countries also would be hit by the
proposal, which has been making the rounds in the U.N. budget committee and
on Capitol Hill. The U.S. contribution would drop only slightly, from 22 percent
to 21.5 percent.
The proposal was promptly rejected as "unfair" by
a representative of China, who complained that its assessment would increase
sixfold, making its share second only to that of the United States.
Currently, each country's share of the $1.9 billion annual
U.N. budget is based on its Gross Domestic Product, while the poorest nations
pay a flat rate of .001 percent of the budget -- roughly $19,000 a year.
The United States, whose contribution is capped by U.S. law
at 22 percent of the regular budget, has suggested that contributions be calculated
instead according to a World Bank scale called "purchasing power parity,"
or PPP.
"While the United States remains a strong supporter of
a more effective, streamlined and efficient U.N., we do feel that other member
states can and should contribute more," U.N. Ambassador John R. Bolton
said in Washington yesterday.
"PPP is the numbers of units of a country's currency
needed to buy in the country the same amounts of goods and services in a different
country," he told the House Appropriations Committee's subcommittee on
science, state, justice and commerce.
Mr. Bolton said the GDP numbers now in use "can be greatly
skewed ... by distortions introduced into the marketplace by currencies which
are nonconvertible and by other factors, as well."
China, for example, has a per capita GDP of about $1,500 based
on its current exchange rate, which economists think has been kept artificially
low. But using the PPP method, the average Chinese has a purchasing power equal
to an American with an income of about $6,200, according to one assessment.
The United States repeatedly has criticized China for holding
down its exchange rate, blaming the action in part for America's soaring international
trade deficit.
China, Russia and other developing countries reject the PPP
as a way to calculate U.N. dues, saying the World Bank developed the model as
a way to assess countries' consumption, not their wealth.
"We do hope that by the end of the day the capacity to
pay will be [retained]," said China's ambassador to the United Nations,
Wang Guangya, whose country currently pays 2.05 percent of the budget, or $38
million.
"To calculate GDP with PPP is ... unfair to a large number
of developing countries," said Wang Xinxia, the Chinese delegation's budget
specialist. Under the formula, she said, China would pay more than France, Germany
or even Japan -- all of which would see their assessments drop.
She also said the data that Beijing submitted to the World
Bank for the calculation of the PPP was taken from just 11 cities and did not
accurately represent the whole country.
Mr. Bolton acknowledged to the committee that many nations
do not collect PPP statistics annually.
The apportionment of U.N. assessments is reviewed every three
years, and must be completed by the end of December so the organization can
send the bills to governments in early January.
The U.S. plan is one of nearly a dozen put into circulation
by eight countries, say diplomats, who have begun to sift through competing
proposals before sending them on for analysis by the U.N. Committee on Contributions.
The U.N. peacekeeping budget, which fluctuates each year with
the number and complexity of the missions under way, is funded separately, although
nations pay in similar proportions. The same is true of the U.N. tribunals for
Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.
The United States is assessed at 27 percent of peacekeeping,
but pays only 25 percent of the budget because of a congressional cap imposed
in 1998.
Source:
The Washington Times
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