
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaks to delegates during a meeting on Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty at UN headquarters in New York City, US, April 27, 2026. REUTERS
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Thursday that the billions of dollars the United States owes to the world body is “non-negotiable”, after reports that Washington had placed conditions on releasing the funds.
The development newswire Devex reported this week that two diplomatic notes circulated by the US called for nine “quick-hit” reforms as a condition for releasing more funds, including further cost-cutting, and moves to counter China’s influence at the United Nations.
“The money we are talking about is referred to as assessed contributions,” Guterres told reporters when asked about the reports. “Assessed contributions are an obligation of member states. They are non-negotiable.”
Guterres, who has been leading reform efforts under pressure from member states, especially the US, said the UN would do its best “to make sure that we make this organisation as effective and as cost-effective and as able to deliver for the people we care for”.
“But these are two separate things,” he added.
Read More: Guterres rebukes US over dues
According to Devex, the US-demanded cost-cutting included overhauling the UN pension system, ending long-distance business-class travel for some senior and all mid-level professionals, additional cuts to senior UN ranks and a 10% reduction in long-running and ineffective peacekeeping missions.
It said they also included a demand to block China from channelling tens of millions of dollars each year to a discretionary fund housed in the office of the UN secretary-general, a move aimed at countering Chinese influence.
The US mission to the United Nations has not commented on the reports. The US has said repeatedly it will keep pressuring the UN to reform after announcing its withdrawal from dozens of UN bodies this year and cutting millions of dollars in funding last year.
Guterres warned in January that the UN faced “imminent financial collapse” due to unpaid fees, most of which are owed by the US. The UN said in February that the US had paid about $160 million of the more than $4 billion it owes to the world body.



