By Neil Hrab on 8.26.04 @ 12:06AM
The U.N. has decided to give the IRS a run for its money.
Upon returning from a United Nations-sponsored conclave in 1954,
philanthropist Preston Hotchkis warned Americans to "[g]et
acquainted with the United Nations, because what it does can touch
your pocketbook." Hotchkis would not be surprised at how just many
times his warning proved correct in the next 50 years. Many
Americans are still not aware of the oddball ambitions of this
international body -- ambitions that carry a steep price tag.
For decades, the U.N. has sought to create new revenue streams
to fatten its coffers. A document to be released this September
will introduce the latest scheme. The Department of Economic and
Social Affairs (DESA) will present the General Assembly with a
study that DESA head Jose Antonio Ocampo calls "proposed global
taxes." The report will consider 5 levies: an airline travel tax, a
weapons sales tax, a carbon tax, a tax on currency trading
transactions, and -- I am not making this up -- a lottery.
Of course, none of the global tax blather in this report
represents new thinking. The lottery idea, for example, goes back
to 1972, when Ghana first floated it. The odds of any of these
proposals ever being enacted are about a thousand to one. Still, it
represents a way of thinking that is both troubling and harmful.
Rather than encouraging developing countries to take the steps
necessary to build their economies -- ending corruption, promoting
the rule of law, etc. -- the world body remains stubbornly wed to
fantasies of global wealth redistribution, with a great big
imaginary bull's-eye on the part of the map that the United States
occupies.
This is, frankly, disappointing. Lately, U.N. agencies had
promoted trade between industrialized and poor countries as a
viable economic strategy for alleviating poverty. In 2002, for
example, Rubens Ricupero, the chief of the U.N.'s Conference on
Trade and Development, proclaimed that "trade and investment are
the most important tools to promote development." The Center even
issued a report denouncing the hypocrisy of developed countries
that preach free trade but keep their markets closed to many goods
from Third World countries -- a rhetorical bell that the U.N.
sounds from time to time.
As the global tax report suggests, however, the old dreams of
global income redistribution have proved more potent. The U.N.
preaches about its "Millennium Development Goals" for the Third
World. It wants wealthy countries to double their yearly
development assistance from $50 billion to $100 billion. This extra
$50 billion is in addition to the "critical mass of new resources"
that U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan wants added to his
organization's budget.
The elephant in the room here is that achieving higher living
standards in the Third World will require the rich global "North"
to learn to share more resources with the indigent global "South."
And there is no identifiable statute of limitations for this
obligation.
The U.N. has gone down this road before. Exactly 30 years ago,
the body released a report on multinational corporations that also
had redistributive intentions. The report argued for weakened
intellectual property laws to "lower the cost of technology
[transfer]" from large companies to developing countries.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce felt this idea to be wrong-headed.
It issued a firm rebuttal, emphasizing truths that, three decades
later, the U.N. still seems no closer to acknowledging. The Chamber
said that the U.N. report was "based on assumptions that
multinational corporations have an infinite capacity for adjustment
and such high returns on investment, overall, that they can
accommodate...a wide variety of [demands] and still remain viable
enough to [provide the investment and technology transfer that
Third World governments] wish to continue to receive from them."
The Chamber argued, correctly, that this is not true, that even
large companies have limits -- that they cannot be treated as
piggybanks to be raided by social engineers.
The U.N. should keep the Chamber's words in mind. At some point,
money invested by governments is money that will not flow to these
nations in trade dollars, into private hands, were it could do more
good by generating jobs or allowing businesses to create economies
of scale.
Assume that the body truly believes that more trade is good for
the poor. This should give the blue hatters an incentive to say
ixnay on the edistributionray. Such calls come with another price
tag that may be harder to measure but that is just as real. In the
minds of an awful lot of Westerners, the U.N. can make the case for
lowering trade barriers, or it can make the case for further
subsidies, but not both. If they insist on eating our cake and
having it too, then no one will take them seriously. And it will be
the poor in developing countries who go hungry.
topics:
Taxes, Trade, Business, Law, United Nations