The Citizen (Gauteng)

Life less lavish at UN

PERKS ‘EXCESSIVE’: PAY CUTS FOR WORLD’S HIGHEST-PAID CIVIL SERVANTS

- Geneva

Their tax-free salaries are complement­ed by many benefits.

On the list of workers facing pay cuts, United Nations (UN) staff in Geneva are unlikely to garner much sympathy. UN employees are by contract the highest paid civil servants in the world.

Their tax-free salaries are often complement­ed by multiple benefits including subsidies for rent, healthcare and dependants, along with educationa­l grants covering part of their children’s private school fees up through one university degree.

Compensati­on can vary widely based on seniority and other factors, but an employee in Geneva with three children and roughly a decade of experience could take home close on R2 million, including salary and dependants’ allowances.

A 7.5% pay cut due to hit Geneva-based UN employees in August has triggered fierce resistance and stirred broader questions about the world body’s future in the face of mounting financial pressures.

Even before US President Donald Trump took office, there were calls from major donors for the UN to tighten its belt.

The United States is the largest UN contributo­r by far – funding roughly a quarter of its operations.

Trump, a vocal UN critic, has proposed a budget calling for significan­t foreign aid reductions.

Some opponents of the looming Geneva salary cut say geopolitic­s may have influenced the decision.

“I think maybe it’s an anticipati­on of cuts coming from the US and maybe trying to show the US Congress that it takes some of the criticism seriously,” said Edward Patrick Flaherty, a lawyer with Schwab, Flaherty & Associates in Geneva who specialise­s in cases against internatio­nal organisati­ons like the UN.

Flaherty, who said he will represent staff if the salary row moves to court, argued that instead of trimming workers pay the UN should save by squanderin­g less money. “There is so much waste in the UN system... and probably abuse.”

Month’s pay lost

The pay cuts were recommende­d by the Internatio­nal Civil Service Commission, a body appointed by the UN General Assembly which governs UN employees.

It found that although Geneva is extremely pricey, the cost of living adjustment given to staffers in the Swiss city was excessive and unfair to other UN duty stations.

Union leaders have rejected those findings and have mounted several challenges, including possibly labour action.

“We are talking about almost a month (of lost salary) in one of the world’s most expensive cities”, said Ian Richards, who heads the UN staff union in Geneva.

He agreed with Flaherty that the push to cut was likely coming from some member-states, rather than within the UN.

But he also suggested that Geneva may have been the first target because of tensions with headquarte­rs in New York.

“There is this thing of how do we attack the Francophon­e duty station,” Richards said. “A French-speaking office with a Francophon­e culture... doesn’t always resonate so well in New York.”

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, based in New York, has come out against the cuts as has UN-Geneva chief Michael Moller and the heads of all agencies based here.

But even if this proposed cut is amended, there is consensus that UN spending will be reined in, as the cost of responding to major internatio­nal emergencie­s continues to soar.

While forcefully defending the UN’s work and arguing that concerns about waste were overblown, Moller conceded that “if our neighbours are not being given the same (compensati­on), there is a limit to how many years we can continue”.

Guterres, who took office in January, has promised broad UN reform but has not yet detailed his plans.

Flaherty maintains hitting mid-career employees with a drastic pay cut is unfair and possibly illegal. But he said that given the UN’s undeniable resource constraint­s you could make clear to new hires that they will not profit from the same benefits as their predecesso­rs. “For new recruits, you could just say ‘happy days are over’”. –

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? OVERSPENDI­NG. A conference room at the United Nations’ offices in Geneva, Switzerlan­d.
Picture: Reuters OVERSPENDI­NG. A conference room at the United Nations’ offices in Geneva, Switzerlan­d.

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