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International-UN-NGOs
Annan prepares for privatisation of UN
2006-02-13
Pressure from US forces Secretary General to put reforms in place
The United Nations has drawn up plans to privatise the bulk of its staff at its New York headquarters or have their work done more cheaply overseas. The move is in response to mounting demands for reform from the United States, its biggest paymaster.

The Business has learned that Kofi Annan, the UN secretary general, has commissioned a study into the outsourcing of the department for General Assembly and Conference ­Management, the main UN ­decision-making body whose officials issue about 200 documents a day in six languages.

The move comes as the UN grapples with the oil-for-food scandal in which officials have been accused of taking bribes from Saddam HusseinÂ’s regime.

Annan will report by the end of February on management reforms to the General Assembly. According to an internal UN document previewing Annan’s report obtained by The Business, he will include “proposals to outsource or off-shore select administrative processes” – suggesting its New York headquarters may shed staff.

Annan is reviewing the study conducted for the UN by US consulting firms Epstein & Fass Associates and Faulkner & Associates. Their preliminary study, which The Business has seen, makes no firm recommendations. But it examines three privatisation possibilities, from the most conservative to the most radical:

* Maintain the status quo of in-house operations, but save money and create efficiency through greater use of technology and eliminating more than 200 jobs through attrition by 2009;

* Retain a core of in-house functions while outsourcing some operations, along the lines of a similar exercise by the World Bank and IMF;

* Spin off the General Assembly department entirely as a for-profit, private company or an independent unit with some control by the secretariat.

The study gives frank assessments of the risks with privatisation, especially guarding privileged information and interrupting projects if new contractors are hired. It concedes privatisation may not save money. “Outsourcing does not guarantee reduced cost”, which “depends on market factors, and also… on how outsourcing is managed”, it says.

The Bush administration has made an overhaul of management a centrepiece of its UN reform programme. John Bolton, US ambassador to the UN, once said that if the New York headquarters lost 10 of its 38 floors, “it wouldn’t make a bit of difference”. He is leading an effort to move the UN towards the efficiency of a private company, including transforming the deputy secretary general into a chief operating officer and demanding that tasks are done by merit, not geography.

Christopher Burnham, a former Bush State Department chief financial officer, was named UN undersecretary general in charge of management last June and declared the UN needed to “refocus on those areas where we have a competitive advantage”.

Rick Grenell, spokesman for the US mission, told The Business the Bush administration had no position on outsourcing. “Our position is that the UN needs to function better,” Grenell said. “We need to look at all ways to make that better. No one is talking about cutting jobs or turning out lights. Talking about outsourcing is way ahead of the game.”

But there has been growing pressure from Washington on the UN to cut costs. The US pays 22% of the UN’s general budget. France pays 6.4%, the UK 5.5%, China 1.53% and Russia 1.2%. All five can wield a veto on war-making decisions. Congressman Henry Hyde’s proposed UN Reform Act of 2005 would withhold 50% of US dues unless at least 32 of 39 proposed reforms are adopted – a clear indication of pressure intended to break the deadlock.

Some staff fear privatisation would cause a cultural shift at the organisation where international civil servants have been chosen through competitive exams for more than 60 years.
I'm a thinking I have a better idea...
Kofi should have listened to The Donald ...
Posted by:.com

#8  Outsourcing? Contracting? Halliburton? Will contractors have access to the lst floor cafe lounge, and bar?
Posted by: Besoeker   2006-02-13 17:02  

#7  T: Excellent points. I'd completely forgotten about sharing a beer in an Irish pub with a Peacekeeper before his deployment to Lebanon years ago. He was bored frequently and called us in the States to chat on his UN Sat phone for hours. Lots of cost cutters are possible.
Posted by: Danielle   2006-02-13 13:55  

#6  Hello T and welcome to Rantburg. Your input is valuable to us since you are actually there. Feel free to let us know when we're wrong about the UN, and, if you work for the US delegation, has Ambassador Bolton seen his RB picture?
Posted by: Seafarious   2006-02-13 12:40  

#5  Just replace that dept with a computerized I-Ching meme. Results might be better.
Posted by: 3dc   2006-02-13 12:05  

#4  I work at the UN there is so many people with jobs there because they come from the "third world" who do nothing but sit around all day talking to their friends at home on a phone which the UN pays half the call costs on banning this alone would save millions and then send the f***ers home
Posted by: T   2006-02-13 11:59  

#3  Outsourcing? It's the UNITED NATIONS, fercryingoutloud. They'd have to hire li'l green Mars men to outsource. Sheesh.
Posted by: Seafarious   2006-02-13 10:14  

#2  The United Nations has drawn up plans to privatise the bulk of its staff at its New York headquarters or have their work done more cheaply overseas.

I'd settle for disbanding and replacement. How about starting immediately?
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2006-02-13 09:55  

#1  Zimbabwe has a lot of unused land for a new headquarters, workers desperately needing jobs and a mostly untouched population of minor females.
Posted by: ed   2006-02-13 08:48  

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