The Washington Times
www.washingtontimes.com

Forum
Published March 6, 2005

The U.N. - an economic menace

The United Nations fancies itself a vehicle that reduces global poverty and
increases economic wellbeing. But, in fact, the U.N. advocates policies that
will do the opposite.

U.N. reports and committees issue a steady stream of demands for tax
increases. Most would fall on Americans and citizens of other very successful
countries, with revenues given to the U.N. and leaders of dysfunctional and
corrupt
countries.

Edward Mortimer, the U.N. secretary general's communications director, in a
Feb. 16 letter in The Washington Times, disputed some of my statements about
the U.N. in a Commentary section column published the preceding week.

Normally, I do not respond publicly to letters about my columns. I am making
an exception because people need to be aware of the U.N.'s misrepresentation
and deception.

Mr. Mortimer, in effect, made the ridiculous argument that the U.N. did a
fine job of administering the Oil-For-Food program. We can wait for the final
reports of the Volcker inquiry, and the U.S. House of Representative
investigation under California Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, and the U.S. Senate
investigation
under Minnesota Sen. Norm Coleman to see if my charges of mismanagement and
corruption are correct.

Meanwhile, we already have Mr. Coleman's statement (based on evidence his
committee obtained): "The gross mismanagement of almost every aspect of the
Oil-for-Food program was simply inexcusable and wasted over $690 million. Every
organization has its shortcomings, but I cannot recall any organization
where the
scope of its problems encompassed every basic management skill needed to
ensure an effective program."

Mr. Mortimer also claimed I was incorrect in saying, "The U.N. keeps pushing
for the right to directly tax the world's citizens and business firms, and has
proposals for doing so."

One merely need go to the U.N. Web site and start reading the various reports
and recommendations from its committees to see that Mr. Mortimer is either
unaware of what his own organization is doing or is in denial. The only reason
these global tax proposals have not been adopted is the stalwart opposition of
the Bush administration.

Among the global levies proposed are a tax on international financial
transactions, a tax on arms sales, a tax on airline travel, and a tax on CO2
emissions, among others. French President Jacques Chirac disclosed the real
agenda
when he was asked about opposition to proposed U.N. taxation of financial
transactions, etc. He replied no country (i.e., the U.S.) could oppose "a
position
that had already been approved by 110 countries and would undoubtedly be
supported by 150 overall." Mr. Mortimer can find this statement and the tax
proposals
in a Sept. 9, 2004, U.N. press release concerning a declaration U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan had signed.

Back in June 2001, Mr. Annan provided, with his blessing, the report of the
High Level Panel on Financing for Development to the General Assembly. This
report called for almost unlimited tax information sharing among U.N. members
(even to the most despotic of regimes) and proposed a number of global taxes,
including a tax of emigrants (emigration is a fundamental human right - even by
U.N. definitions). On July 20, 2004, Ambassador Sichan Siv, U.S. representative
to the U.N. Economic and Social Council, commented on a U.N. report:

"We have fundamental concerns with the practicality of global taxation. We do
not see how a global tax could be designed and administered in a way that is
democratically accountable to the citizens of our countries. Any tax on
international economic activity is likely to reduce flows of trade and
investment.
This is obviously not good for development."

Subsequently, on Sept. 20, 2004, in reference to another U.N. report, former
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Ann Veneman said: "The report should have given
more attention to practical steps to sustain growth. There is too much
emphasis on schemes, such as global taxes, to raise external resources.
Global taxes
are inherently undemocratic; implementation is impossible."

The U.N. has also called upon the U.S. to increase its development aid
manyfold, yet has failed to recognize this money does not come from the
tooth fairy
but from very hard-working U.S. taxpayers.

The economic evidence is overwhelming that almost all the world's countries
already tax their citizens well above the welfare-maximizing rates. Thus the
U.N. should call for lower taxes to maximize world economic growth.

Increasing development aid will not improve the plight of the world's poor
until the rule of law is enshrined, property rights are protected, markets are
freed, and tax and regulatory barriers to economic opportunity are removed.
Given these reforms, development aid will not be necessary because private
capital markets will provide the needed funds.

The U.N. proposal to increase taxes on the citizens of successful countries
and transfer the money to U.N. bureaucrats and corrupt and incompetent
government officials is a formula for global economic destruction and
enslavement. To preserve global economic liberty and progress, the U.N.
budget must be reduced to stop it from promulgating these destructive
schemes.



RICHARD W. RAHN
Senior fellow,
The Discovery Institute.
Adjunct scholar,
The Cato Institute.

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