You are here

Europäische Union

Developing Countries Feel Squeeze from Lower Natural Resource Revenue & Falling Foreign Aid

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Tue, 05/26/2026 - 09:51

Credit: Derek Hudson/Getty Images. Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF)

By Mario Mansour and Fayçal Sawadogo
WASHINGTON DC, May 26 2026 (IPS)

Developing countries face major difficulties as income from natural resource extraction industries decreases and wealthier nations reduce their aid.

Nontax revenue from natural resources extraction and foreign aid grants for general spending have fallen by a combined 3.8 percent of gross domestic product since 2000, according to the latest annual update of the IMF’s World Revenue Longitudinal Database.

Gains from tax collection since then amounted to just 2.6 percent, offsetting only two-thirds of the decline, our unique tally of detailed public revenue data shows.

The Chart of the Week shows that the decrease in proceeds from nontax extractive revenue was the biggest driver of the drop for both low-income developing countries and emerging market economies.

These revenues are generally what governments earn from industries like oil, gas, and mining—such as royalties, profit sharing, and dividends from state-owned enterprises. Declining foreign aid grants for general spending also contributed to lower revenues.

Closing the gap often requires collecting more tax revenue, and affected countries won’t be able to deliver on their economic development goals without doing so. To succeed, they need sustained investment in domestic tax policy and tax administration, supported by effective institutions to underpin them.

The IMF supports member countries through its capacity development efforts—customized technical assistance and training services, often delivered through collaboration with donor countries and other international organizations.

Capacity development helps developing countries build expertise and policy frameworks to improve tax systems and institutions. It also reduces dependence on volatile and declining revenues, such as from extractive industries and foreign support.

Helping developing countries with this work, known as domestic revenue mobilization, contributes to fiscal resilience, which ultimately benefits global economic growth.

Evaluating how governments raise more reliable, sustainable revenue from within the economy requires high-quality granular data. Our database tracks decades of tax and nontax revenue consistently across 195 economies using data provided by our members.

The database is also a unique resource for researchers, policymakers, and development practitioners seeking to analyze revenue trends, benchmark performance, and identify reform priorities.

Mario Mansour & Fayçal Sawadogo, International Monetary Fund

IPS UN Bureau

 


!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src=p+'://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js';fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs');  

  

 

Categories: Africa, Europäische Union

ENTWURF EINER STELLUNGNAHME zu dem Bericht über den Vorschlag für eine Richtlinie des Rates zur Änderung der Richtlinie (EU) 2015/637 über Koordinierungs- und Kooperationsmaßnahmen zur Erleichterung des konsularischen Schutzes von nicht vertretenen...

ENTWURF EINER STELLUNGNAHME zu dem Bericht über den Vorschlag für eine Richtlinie des Rates zur Änderung der Richtlinie (EU) 2015/637 über Koordinierungs- und Kooperationsmaßnahmen zur Erleichterung des konsularischen Schutzes von nicht vertretenen Unionsbürgern in Drittländern und der Richtlinie (EU) 2019/997 zur Festlegung eines EU-Rückkehrausweises
Ausschuss für auswärtige Angelegenheiten
Nacho Sánchez Amor

Quelle : © Europäische Union, 2026 - EP
Categories: Europäische Union

Risse im Kreml: Warum die Macht von Putin zunehmend bröckelt

Blick.ch - Mon, 05/25/2026 - 16:39
Russlands Krieg gegen die Ukraine setzt offenbar selbst Putins Machtapparat zunehmend unter Druck. Hinter den Kulissen wachsen Frust, Spannungen und Zweifel. Sechs Entwicklungen zeigen, warum der Kreml nervöser wirkt denn je.

Air Algérie : attention, ce bagage supplémentaire peut vous coûter 180 euros

Algérie 360 - Mon, 05/25/2026 - 11:23

Attention au bagage de trop ! Air Algérie durcit le ton et rappelle les règles à bord : désormais, c’est une seule pièce par passager, […]

L’article Air Algérie : attention, ce bagage supplémentaire peut vous coûter 180 euros est apparu en premier sur .

The Search is On for the Next U.N. Secretary General in a Turbulent World

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Mon, 05/25/2026 - 09:33

The headquarters of the United Nations with Trump World Tower looming in the foreground, in Manhattan, NY, on April 28, 2026. (SEBASTIAN CHRISTOPH GOLLNOW/PICTURE ALLIANCE VIA GETTY IMAGES) Source: Wahington Reports

By Ian Williams
NEW YORK, May 25 2026 (IPS)

AS THE WORLD HURTLES TO HELL (albeit in a SpaceX rather than a hand basket), it might seem of only academic interest which cipher vegetates on the 38th floor of the U.N. Headquarters. However, the choice is due by the end of the year, unless, as has happened in the past, the Security Council is veto-bound and asks António Guterres to stay on as interim Secretary General.

Guterres certainly has experience for a seat-warming position, since he has performed like an interim Secretary General ever since he was first appointed. At times when his voice could and should have made a difference, he has followed the guidance of the three wise monkeys (see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil). The Secretary General’s ability to put items on the council agenda and raise them publicly are his few effective powers in the face of the permanent members’ traditional lackadaisical stance.

His studied withdrawal from influence has infected other levels of the Secretariat and allowed the Security Council to reach new lows of subservience to power. So, if and when the council picks his successor, it’s unlikely that crowds will gather on U.N. Plaza to watch the white smoke rising to announce the anointment.

That is not only because Trump World Tower looms over the plaza like an escaped prop from “2001: A Space Odyssey,” but also because its eponymous owner has done so much to devalue the U.N. One could almost suspect that it is only allowed to hang on in New York because property values would plummet in the neighborhood if all the insouciant and complaisant diplomats who work in the U.N. complex had to leave.

The U.N.’s geopolitical absence certainly diminishes potential public interest in the race and is compounded by the increasing ineffectuality of the Security Council in the face of the erasure of the U.N. Charter. The guiding principle of the Secretariat often seems to be plucked from Arthur Hugh Clough’s old poem, “Thou shalt not kill/ But needs’t not strive, officiously to keep alive.”

However, the general membership is almost as complicit. Faced with the latest U.S. demand to reshape the organization before Washington even considers paying a part of its legally obligated payments, their response is to dicker about the depth of evisceration, not to challenge the assumptions. Of course, the U.N. needs reform—but not necessarily in the way the U.S. has been demanding for half a century.

Western signatories of the Rome Convention for the International Criminal Court have left their nationals, like Francesca Albanese and Karim Khan, to swing in the wind in the face of an entirely illegal U.S.–Israeli war on International Criminal Court staff. Even their home states’ declaration that they will provide government backed credit to the victims of U.S. sanctions would send a signal and some succor to the judges. A robust denunciation by the outgoing Secretary General (a lame duck and hence beyond significant U.S. payback) would have helped, but it was not forthcoming.

As the only figure who could coordinate (and heaven help us, lead) the defense, the forlorn position of the Secretary General is still essential despite the lackluster field. So, the choice is important—as well as boring.

So far, there is a growing consensus that the next leader needs to be a woman, which China has been very firm on, and should be from the Latin American and Caribbean region. So far, it’s a very uninspiring and, dare one say, “mature” field. Maybe there should be as much pressure for “youth’s” turn as there is for a woman, not least since both declared female candidates are of a certain age. The “most difficult job in the world” is not one for the elderly.

The April candidate forums at the U.N. featured four announced aspirants, but as the Book of Proverbs says, “Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that keepeth the law, happy is he.” None of the candidates offered a vision: their presentations were more like an AI-generated resume for corporate human resources.

Even the candidates who showed some signs of integrity, like the “keeping the law” bit, seem to be missing the vision thing and, frankly, professed over-adherence to the law is a stretch for candidates who want to avoid a veto from the P5. Which is, of course, why there was conspicuous silence on the hustings about Israel and Iran. It also so far guaranteed candidates who will not rock the boat for Washington.

So in a field of lame horses, the three-legged one might limp home, and that could be former President of Senegal Macky Sall, who is not a woman, not Latin American and does not have the support of his own country or the African Union. His best qualification is the traditional U.N. promotion criterion: not being remembered for anything in particular. He could fall in the East River and not cause a ripple. But he is unlikely to be willing to undergo the gender transition necessary. China says it wants a woman and has historically been prepared to stand its ground with repeated vetoes.

Former Chilean President Michelle Bachelet has the required diplomatic and political credentials, and she has clearly been playing the long game. As U.N. Human Rights Commissioner she sat upon a report about the People’s Republic of China’s abuse of the Uighurs, which might fend off a Chinese veto but raises questions about her integrity and independence.

It does suggest that she had acute political antennae since at that time pandering to China could have cost her support with the U.S. and Europeans—but now, perhaps not so much. Under the MAGA Trump Republicans, human rights are a now and then thing. More important perhaps to Washington, Chile’s new right-wing government pulled its endorsement of her which could burnish her credentials with what’s left of the progressive world. And her gender and Latin American origins tick other boxes.

In contrast, right-wing Argentinian President Javier Milei backs Rafael Grossi’s candidacy, which detracts from Grossi’s globalist credentials to head the U.N. However, as head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), his equivocation about Iranian nuclear activities might well be negotiable into active U.S. support. He has been a deft tightrope walker, trying not to give Iran a clean bill of health, but avoiding complicity in an over-explicit casus belli to Washington, which would upset Moscow and Beijing (and may yet). But he has defied best practice for candidates by staying active in his U.N. role, which suggests he knows his IAEA position gives him cards to play.

Costa Rica’s Rebeca Grynspan is an uninspiring apparatchik who has presided over the effectual dismantlement of U.N. Conference on Trade and Development, the development agency that had been in the sights of Washington for decades. While one cannot hold family connections against her, many countries might also worry about the optics of a secretary general whose sister is an Israeli settler in the West Bank. However, she is backed by her government, unlike some other candidates, and is a Latina, so ticks two of the boxes, and is likely to get support from the U.S. (and Israel, which does not have a direct seat on the Security Council, but nevertheless is reputedly a presence).

Looking at the heavily handicapped slate so far, it’s good that there are nominations waiting in the wings. Barbadian PM Mia Amor Mottley would be an ideal candidate, ticking both the vision and law boxes. A woman from the Latin American and Caribbean region whose otherwise disqualifying integrity might pass the Trump test by speaking English and being previously accoladed by no less than the American Enterprise Institute! However, she has just won re-election in Barbados and would probably prefer to stay where she is now.

Another person who announced her candidacy is Ecuador’s María Fernanda Espinosa, former General Assembly President, who is also missing support from her own government, but she has shown both vision and integrity and has other backers. And she is not of pensionable age.

In the end, sadly, the odds are against anyone who meets the needs of the world and organization. Their very qualifications would be unlikely to survive the whims and prejudices of this U.S. administration, let alone survive scrutiny by Moscow or Beijing. Even if Russia and China pay lip service to the international order and sacrifice their immediate prejudices for the greater good, Washington is unlikely to be so forbearing.

Overall, the question is whether the U.N. is redeemable while some countries have veto power. At one time the U.S. realized the advantages of maintaining the U.N. as a thin blue fig leaf for its actual hegemony, but it no longer sees the need to cover its rampant MAGA-hood.

U.N. correspondent Ian Williams is president of the Foreign Press Association of the U.S. He is the author of U.N.told: The Real Story of the United Nations in Peace and War (available from Middle East Books and More).

Source: Washington Report on Middle Eastern Affairs
https://www.wrmea.org/north-america/the-search-is-on-for-the-next-u.n.-secretary-general-in-a-turbulent-world.html

IPS UN Bureau

 


!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src=p+'://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js';fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs');  

  

 

Categories: Africa, Europäische Union

Affaire Hichem Aboud en France : 4 individus mis en examen pour « tentative de meurtre »

Algérie 360 - Mon, 05/25/2026 - 01:08

Selon plusieurs médias français, un juge d’instruction antiterroriste a mis en examen, dimanche 24 mai, quatre individus soupçonnés d’être impliqués dans « une tentative de meurtre » […]

L’article Affaire Hichem Aboud en France : 4 individus mis en examen pour « tentative de meurtre » est apparu en premier sur .

Joint statement of the 8th EU-Mexico summit, 22 May 2026

European Council - Sat, 05/23/2026 - 04:08
The leaders of the European Union and Mexico held their 8th EU-Mexico summit in Mexico City on 22 May 2026, and agreed on a joint statement.

European Peace Facility: Council adopts the third bilateral assistance measure in support of the Albanian Armed Forces

European Council - Sat, 05/23/2026 - 04:08
The Council adopted a third assistance measure for Albania worth €21 million under the EPF.

Declaraciones del Presidente António Costa en la rueda de prensa posterior a la cumbre UE-México

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Sat, 05/23/2026 - 04:08
El Presidente del Consejo Europeo, António Costa, presentó los principales resultados de las deliberaciones de los líderes durante la octava cumbre UE-México, celebrada en Ciudad de México el 22 de mayo de 2026.
Categories: Europäische Union

Joint statement of the 8th EU-Mexico summit, 22 May 2026

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Sat, 05/23/2026 - 04:08
The leaders of the European Union and Mexico held their 8th EU-Mexico summit in Mexico City on 22 May 2026, and agreed on a joint statement.
Categories: Europäische Union

'Speed, money and compassion' - lessons from an Ebola survivor and other experts

BBC Africa - Sat, 05/23/2026 - 01:07
Those caught up in West Africa's Ebola outbreak a decade ago on how best to tackle the current epidemic.
Categories: Africa, Europäische Union

Polizei sucht Zeugen: Rollerfahrer (44) in Fehraltorf ZH schwer verunglückt

Blick.ch - Sat, 05/23/2026 - 00:26
Ein 44-jähriger Mann prallte auf der Russikerstrasse gegen eine Mauer. Er wurde mit schweren Verletzungen per Heli ins Spital geflogen.

Heisses Training in einer heissen Hockey-Stadt: Hamilton schockt doppelt: «Vielleicht noch 5 Jahre dabei»

Blick.ch - Fri, 05/22/2026 - 20:38
Montreal bleibt im Ausnahmezustand und träumt vom 25. Stanley-Cup-Triumph. Nach 33 Jahren. «Verrückt, was sich da in der Stadt abspielt. Du kommst kaum mehr in dein Hotel», lacht der siebenfache Montreal-Sieger Sir Lewis Hamilton (41).

Bolt-CEO entlässt komplette Personalabteilung: «Sie haben Probleme geschaffen, die gar nicht existieren»

Blick.ch - Fri, 05/22/2026 - 20:32
Bolt-CEO Ryan Breslow sorgt erneut für Schlagzeilen. Der Jungunternehmer hat die gesamte HR-Abteilung seines Start-ups entlassen. Während einige den Schritt verstehen, werfen ihm Kritiker eine Marketingaktion vor.

Sie wollten Rolf Wegmüller um eine Million Franken erpressen – Hunde-Entführer verurteilt!: «Das Plädoyer der Staatsanwältin ist mir sehr nahegegangen»

Blick.ch - Fri, 05/22/2026 - 20:28
Rolf Wegmüller (61) erlebte 2025 einen Alptraum: Zwei seiner Hunde wurden entführt und Lösegeld gefordert. Nun wurde ein Täter in Dietikon verurteilt. Blick hat mit Wegmüller gesprochen.

Verstärkung für die Offensive: Lugano vermeldet nächsten Zuzug – mit bekanntem Namen

Blick.ch - Fri, 05/22/2026 - 20:24
Nächster Neuzugang für den FC Lugano. Beckham David Castro Espinosa unterschreibt bis 2029. Der kolumbianische Flügelspieler soll mit seiner Schnelligkeit und Technik die Offensive der Tessiner verstärken.

115 Franken für 80 PV-Module? Diese Rechnung kann nicht aufgehen: Unglaublich dreister Zoll-Schwindel aufgeflogen

Blick.ch - Fri, 05/22/2026 - 20:14
Dreister Zoll-Schwindel an der Schweizer Grenze. Es geht um einen Lastwagen voller Photovoltaikmodule und eine unglaublich niedrige Rechnung.

European Peace Facility: Council adopts the third bilateral assistance measure in support of the Albanian Armed Forces

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Fri, 05/22/2026 - 19:08
The Council adopted a third assistance measure for Albania worth €21 million under the EPF.

Media advisory - General Affairs Council and 8th Accession Conference with Albania, 26 May 2026

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Fri, 05/22/2026 - 19:08
Main agenda items, approximate timing, public sessions and press opportunities.

Weekly schedule of President António Costa

Europäischer Rat (Nachrichten) - Fri, 05/22/2026 - 19:08
Weekly schedule of President António Costa, 25-31 May 2026.

Pages

THIS IS THE NEW BETA VERSION OF EUROPA VARIETAS NEWS CENTER - under construction
the old site is here

Copy & Drop - Can`t find your favourite site? Send us the RSS or URL to the following address: info(@)europavarietas(dot)org.